105 10 25MB
English Pages 542 [584] Year 1983
Here, freshly picked by a brilliant connoisseur (and practitioner) of
humor, are the
funniest writ-
finest,
who makes us laugh today Woody Allen, from Benchley to
ings of everyone
Thurber
from Leacock (Stephen)
Heller, .
.
.
the
to
—from Joseph
Lebowitz (Fran)
to
names (they're all on the front of the
jacket) tell
the story!
Mordecai Richler, whose own writings have so happily enriched our store of comedy,
He
behind the collection.
is
the
man
has read just about every
page of American and English prose of recent vintage that
is
(or pretends to be)
funny And he has admitted
to these exclusive precincts only the
cream of the
cream, the best of the best. The
the first major
humor
anthology of modern
result
is
in years: stories, short
from novels, humorous
plays, letters, excerpts
ings of every variety, kindred only in their
make
writ-
power
to
us laugh.
Here, in top form, are Donald Barthelme, Nora
Ephron, Peter
De Vries
Here
funhouse looking-glass (by George
Men art
Women
Played Cards As
.
Do").
My Lovely Appetizer" to E.
Hemingway, "Across the .
Kaufman
S.
.
.
in "If
art imitating
(from Perelman's hilariously hardboiled "Fare-
well,
.
reflected in a
is life
Street
Whites parody of
B.
and Into the
Grill")
Groucho Marx's
truth funnier than fiction (from
increasingly riotous correspondence with
some im-
Truman Capote's tour of Upper East Side apartments in the company of possibly literal-minded lawyers to
a
Manhattan cleaning
daddies
safecracker),
recalled by
Runyon's babysitting
mothers
Jewish
burg's guidelines for
alarming
Damon
(including
how
Mencken),
Here are doting
lady)
to
Dan Green-
(and
be one), colorful cops
rising
(as
young executixes of an
new breed (Tom Wolfe's "The Mid-Atlantic
Man")... the most hilarious dream ever recorded,
Thomas Meehan's "Yma Dream" Here Wodehouse and Waugh heart (John Cheever's as slightly
more
"The Chaste
carnal
affairs
.
.
.
surprises
from
are affairs of the Clarissa") as well
(some confessions of
Philip Roth's Portnoy).
science
.
.humor with
Baker's
(Russell
horrihly
a social
funny
con-
"Bonih
Math") and society satirically observed (Cyra McFad-
den on
a
Marin County wedding)
—
Here are
great
read-alouds (from Eudora Welty's single funniest story,
"Why
I
Live at the PO.," to an exercise in
Eisenhowerese by Oliver Jensen) Here, in sum,
book
the best of
is
modern humor
that brings together those rare bursts of
genius, those explosions of wit
—
comic
and verbal inventive-
ness, those salvos of undiluted laughter that rise like
Roman
candles above the
—volume
hugely entertaining
the collection of modern
MoRDKCAi RiCHLKR comic novels
as
is
This huge
rest. is
humor
—and
certain to stand as for years to
the author of such
come.
memorable
The Apprenticeship of Duddy
Kravitz, Stick Your Neck Out, Cocksure, St. Urbain's
Horseman, and Joshua Then and Now. He
lives in
Montreal, where he was born and brought up, and to
which he returned in
London, with
three sons.
a
few years ago,
his wife
and
their
after
two decades
two daughters and
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2010
http://www.archive.org/details/bestofmodernhumoOOrich
THE BEST OF
MODERN
HUMOR
THE BEST OF
MODERN
HUMOR EDITED BY Mordecai Richler
ALFRED
A.
KNOPF
NEW YORK
1983
THIS
IS
A BORZOI BOOK PUBUSHED BY ALFRED
©
Copyright All rights reserved
A.
KNOPF, INC.
1983 by Mordecai Richler
under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.,
Random House,
Distributed by
Published in Canada by McClelland
Owing all
The
4.
Ltd.
,
Toronto.
to reprint material
found at the end of the book.
Main
3.
New York.
to limitations of space,
UBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING
American
,
& Stewart,
acknowledgments of permission will be
1.
Inc.
New York.
entry under
best of
wit
PN6162.B5
2.
English wit and humor.
— 20th century. — 20th century.
Richler, Mordecai.
8i7'.5'o8
1983
ISBN
Manufactured
title:
literature
English literature I.
PUBLICATION DATA
modem humor.
and humor.
American
IN
83-48102
0-394-51531-5
in the
United States of America
For
my
Florence, Daniel, Noah,
family
—
Emma, Martha and
Jacob
Contents
Editors Foreword
xiii
Stephen Leacock GERTRUDE THE GOVERNESS: OR SIMPLE SEVENTEEN
Maurice Baring KING LEAR'S DAUGHTER
i
9
H. L. Mencken RECOLLECTIONS OF NOTABLE COPS
13
Damon Runyon
19
BUTCH MINDS THE BABY
G. Wodehouse UKRIDGE'S ACCIDENT SYNDICATE P.
Ring Lardner THE RUSHER'S HONEYMOON,
31
47 excerpt from You Know
Marianne Moore
Me A/
66
CORRESPONDENCE WITH DAVID WALLACE
Robert Benchley
74
OPERA SYNOPSES
George S. Kaufman IF MEN PLAYED CARDS AS WOMEN DO
78
Contents
viii
Groucho Marx
84
LETTERS TO WARNER BROTHERS and GUMMO MARX
Frank Sullivan
90
THE CLICHE EXPERT TESTIFIES ON LOVE B.
J.
Morton (Beachcomber)
95
THE INTRUSIONS OF CAPTAIN FOULENOUGH
James Thurber THE BREAKING UP OF THE WINSHIPS E. B.
103
108
White
ACROSS THE STREET AND INTO THE GRILL
Wolcott Gibbs LIFE FORTUNE TIME .
.
.
.
.
.
111 .
.
.
LUCE
Gibbons EXCERPT FROM COLD COMFORT FARM
123
Evelyn Waugh WINNER TAKES ALL
133
A. J. Liebling "NOTHING BUT A LITTLE PISSANT," excerpt from The Earl of Louisiana
148
Perelman FAREWELL, MY LOVELY APPETIZER
158
Stella
S.
J.
Leo Rosten
164
MR. K'A'P'L'A'N, THE COMPARATIVE, AND THE SUPERLATIVE, excerpt from The Education o/^H'Y'M'A*N K*A'P*L'A*N
Eudora Welty
WHY
I
LIVE AT THE
169
P.O.
Peter de Vries REQUIEM FOR A NOUN, OR INTRUDER
181 IN
THE DUSK
Flann O'Brien (Myles na Gopaleen) KEATS AND CHAPMAN
186
Contents
John Cheever
ix
189
THE CHASTE CLARISSA Oliver Jensen THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS
199 IN
EISENHOWERESE
Saul Bellow EXCERPT FROM TO JERUSALEM AND BACK
201
Jessica Mitford
EMIGRATION, excerpt from
205 Daughters and Rebels
Kingsley Amis ANOTHER GODDAM ENGLISHMAN,
211 excerpt from One Fat Englishman
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. REPORT ON THE BARNHOUSE EFFECT
219
Joseph Heller GOLD'S STEPMOTHER, excerpt from Good as Gold
231
John Mortimer excerft from CLINGING TO THE WRECKAGE
245
Jean Kerr TOUJOURS TRISTESSE
259
Truman Capote A DAY'S
263
WORK
Terry Southern I
276
AM MIKE HAMMER
Thomas Berger CHEF REINHART,
excerpt from Reinhart's
Russell Baker
283 Women
299
BOMB MATH Art Buchwald SAVING PAPER
302
Contents
X
Kenneth Tynan
304
JUST PLAIN FOLKS
Thomas Meehan
307
YMA DREAM Stanley Elkin BERNIE PERK, excerpt from The Dick
311 Gibson Show
Bruce Jay Friedman THE LONELY GUY'S APARTMENT Wilfrid
Sheed
334
346
FOUR HACKS
Donald Barthelme GAME
350
V. S. Naipaul THE MECHANICAL GENIUS
355
Tom Wolfe
366
THE MID-ATLANTIC MAN Philip
WHACKING
Roth
379
OFF, excerpt from Portnoy's Complaint
Beryl Bainbridge DINNER AT BINNY'S, excerpt from Injury Time
Woody
Allen
392
409
THE KUGELMASS EPISODE
Bruce McCall POPULAR WORKBENCH
419
Calvin Trillin DINNER AT THE DE LA RENTAS'
427
Dan Greenburg
430
HOW TO BE A JEWISH MOTHER
Contents
Cyra McFadden HIP WEDDING ON MOUNT TAM,
xi
441 excerpt from The
Alan Coren LONG AGO AND FAR AWAY
Serial
444
Marshall Brickman
448
THE ANALYTIC NAPKIN
Alexander Theroux MRS. PROBY GETS HERS, excerpt from
453 Three Wogs
Nora Ephron
467
A FEW WORDS ABOUT BREASTS
Max Apple
475
THE ORANGING OF AMERICA
Roy Blount,
Jr.
489
Veronica Geng
496
TRASH NO MORE
MY MAO Garrison Keillor SHY RIGHTS:
502
WHY NOT PRETTY SOON?
Lisa Alther
THE COMMUNE,
508
excerpt from
Kinflicks
Lynn Garaganis AMERICA'S CUP
'83:
518
THE SHERPA CHALLENGE
Fran Lebowitz NOTES ON "TRICK"
526
Ian Frazier DATING YOUR MOM
533
Foreword
by Mordecai Richler
Years ago a young lady out of Oklahoma City was sufficiently intrepid to
Thurber asking him if there were any standard rules for writing humor. The best Thurber could come up with was a list of proscriptions. Avoid comic stories, he warned, "about plumbers who are write James
mistaken for surgeons,
sheriffs
who
are terrified by gunfire, psychiatrists
of blood, adolescent
women patients, doctors who faint at the sight girls who know more about sex than their fathers
who
turn out to be the parents of a two-hundred-pound
who
are driven crazy by
do, and midgets
wrestler." Thurber, after twenty years of sifting through unsolicited
manuscripts, also "I'll"
recommended
to
neophyte humorists that the word
should not be divided so that the
"I'
"
is
on one
line
and the
"11"
on
the next, because the reader's attention can never be recaptured. "It also
never recovers," he wrote, "from such names as
Lynn, Sally Forth, Bertha Twins, and the In principle,
I
Ann
S. Thetic,
Maud
like."
share Thurber's aversion to knee-slapper names.
However, that rule has been successfully broken not only by Ben Jonson and Sheridan, but also by one of the funniest of recent British humorists. Beachcomber (J. B. Morton), who for forty years wrote the "By the Way" column in the Daily Express. Beachcomber gave us the immortal Captain rot
Foulenough, Dr. Smart-Allick of Narkover, Mr. Justice Cocklecar-
(Whom God Preserve) of Utrecht. Even so a prose stylist as Evelyn Waugh was not above dealing in funny
and Dr. Strabismus
fastidious
names (Lord Pastmaster, Lady Metroland), and neither is Joseph Heller, who has already given us Major Major Major and Milo Minderbinder. Incidentally, a rule not mentioned by Thurber is that it is usually unwise to ask one comic novelist to pronounce on another. In 1961,
Foreword
xiv
Nina Bourne, then with Simon
Waugh
22, soliciting a jacket quote.
Thank you fascinates
.
.
replied:
for sending Catch-22.
you so much.
lady's reading. It suffers .
& Schuster, sent Waugh a copy oiCatch-
You may quote me
It
has
many
I
am
not only from indelicacy but from
prolixity.
"This exposure of corruption, cow-
as saying:
American myself) and
officers will
your country (such as
greatly
a strange force,
book
passages quite unsuitable to a
ardice and incivility of
It is
sorry that the
outrage
all
friends of
comfort your enemies."
Dorothy Parker once wrote, that compels a
The world is stacked against him. Go ahead, make me laugh, you twit. You can play percentage baseball, paint by numbers, even raise your own children according to Dr. Spock, but
writer to be a humorist.
no guidelines for writing good humor. "Dying is easy," actor Edmund Gwenn on his deathbed. "Comedy is difficult." if you must "light writing," is Surprisingly, comedy, or there are
—
—
sometimes regarded
An
as necessarily second-rate.
said
also
occupation not quite
respectable for the mature writer. According to P. G.
Wodehouse, the
trouble in his day began at their public schools: If a boy merely talked
amusingly, he was a
silly
ass.
If his
conversation took a mordant or
he was a funny swine. "You think you're a funny swine, don't you?" Whichever, wrote Wodehouse, the wits were scorned and despised, and lucky not to get kicked. "When you do comedy," Woody Allen once said, "you are not satirical turn,
sitting at the
grownups' table."
The same novel, the
more
a fine writer as
many
critics
who
will give
the benefit of the doubt to a solemn
comedy. Such his day, seen by
intractable the better, tend to patronize
Ring Lardner was underestimated
— including himself—
no more than
in
mere
John Lardner has written that the enduring popularity of You Know Me Al startled his father, "but it totally failed to cause him to think of what he had written as literature." Virginia Woolf who didn't know a squeeze as
a
entertainer.
—
play from a pitch-out, and would never have been called
upon
umpire a ball game even in East Hampton thought otherwise. In an essay published in 1925, she wrote: "Mr. Lardner has talents of a remarkable order. With extraordinary ease and aptitude, with the quickest of strokes, the surest touch, the sharpest insight, he lets Jack Keefe the baseball to
—
player cut out his
own
outline,
fill
in his
own
depths, until the figure of
the foolish, boastful, innocent athlete lives before us." If
you don't count some of Jehovah's injunctions, there are no
Foreword
humorists for them:
I
".
can .
.
although the Talmud has a kind word
recall in the Bible,
And
xv
These two
Elijah said to Berokah,
the world to come.' Berokah then asked them, 'What
is
share in
will also
your occupation?'
'We are merrymakers. When we see a person who is down" hearted, we cheer him up.' Once, the humorist was a sort of comic dwarf. "In the Middle
They
replied,
Ages," wrote P. G.
Some Thoughts on Humorists, "the thought nothing so funny as a man who was
Wodehouse
well-bred and well-to-do
in
considerably shorter than they were, or at least cultivated a deceptive
Anyone in those days who was fifty inches tall or less was per se a humorist. They gave him a comical cap and a stick with little bells attached to it and told him to caper about and amuse them. And as it was stoop.
not a hard
and the pickings were pretty good, he
life
fell
in
with their
wishes."
Shakespeare, no slouch with one-liners himself, clearly appreciated the proper place of the humorist in the social order.
Prince Hal
become Henry
of his
behind him:
riots,
I
know thee
How
ill
V
than he puts
not, old
man:
fall
No
sooner does
Falstaff, the tutor
and feeder
to thy prayers;
white hairs become a fool and
jester!
Actually, poor old white-haired Falstaff was probably not nearly so
he appeared. Surely he worked extremely hard at burnishing quips, he didn't simply pluck them out of the air. Humor, after all, is
dissolute as his
a very serious business
So, in
my
—
as a rule, the easier
it
looks, the harder
came.
experience, contemporary humorists, away from their punish-
ing work, tend to be a most melancholy, even morose,
from
it
lot.
their typewriters, they are often considerable drinkers.
they are inclined to hide themselves away in corners,
Unchained At
lest
parties,
officious
up on them and demand they say something funny right now or, even worse, dig in their heels and begin, "Hey, have you ever ?" heard the one about "Humor to me," Dorothy Parker once wrote, "takes in many things. There must be courage; there must be awe. There must be criticism, for humor, to my mind, is encapsulated in criticism. There must be a disciplined eye and a wild mind. There must be a magnificent disregard for your reader, for if he cannot follow you, there is nothing you can do strangers sneak
.
about
.
.
it."
In the
last
pages of Heartburn
(or, Portia's
Complaint), a comic.
Foreword
xvi
thinly disguised autobiographical novel about the
Nora Ephron
riage,
Of course
writes:
I'm writing this
done what
that I've
pain, pretended
Vera
breakup of her mar-
it
later,
usually do
I
— hidden
later,
and
feel
you have
worries
it
me
the anger, covered the
wasn't there for the sake of the story
"Why do you
said:
much much
.
.
.
to turn everything into a
story?"
So
I
told
her why:
Because
if I tell
Because
if I tell
a story,
a story,
rather have you laugh at
Obviously,
on experience
is
I
me
control the version. I
can make you laugh, and
than
humor can conceal
feel sorry for
me.
or even heal pain.
The
best revenge
writing well, recalling past humiliations not so
tranquility as with laughter, biting
back the anger, making
wonderfully absurd in retrospect. But,
make no
Wodehouse,
it
mistake, there
deal of hurt at the core oi Portnoy's Complaint. Catch-22
anguish.
would
I
is
much
in
seem a good
all is
also a cry of
ostensibly so good-natured, obviously found pre-
would not like to have been in the same room when S. J. Perelman was dealing with a bore. Waugh's magnificent and hilarious trilogy about the British in World War II {Men at Arms, Officers and Gentlemen, The End of the Battle) is also an exposure of corruption, cowardice and incivility among the British officer class tentious people an abomination.
I
during the battle for Crete.
Waugh, of course, was a notorious reactionary. As a rule, however, uncompromising political commitment seems to preclude a sense of humor.
Come
to think of
it,
I've
never read a really funny piece by either
—
communist, although lapsed communists Jessica Mitford, say have been highly amusing about their experiences. Another former communist informed by a sense of fun was Claude Cockburn. In his autobiography, Cockburn recalled that while he was working nights on a fascist or a
—
the desk at the
awake
— he
being the
and
London Times, during his colleagues
man who
succeeded
into the next morning's edition.
the thirties
had devised
— hard
put to stay
a competition, the
winner
in slipping the dullest possible headline
Cockburn once won with
a headline that
read:
SMALL EARTHQUAKE
IN CHILE NOT MANY KILLED
This, of course, was in appalling bad taste.
World country,
It
possibly even suggesting that
poked cruel fun life
at a
Third
was held cheap there.
Foreword
xvii
Such a headline, considering the spirit of the Times competition, smacked of racism and imperialist condescension. It was also very witty. The only humor that doesn't offend somebody out there is what Dorothy Parker has discounted nists
moo
milk until they
as those little
formula pieces that colum-
with pain: "Over and over and on and on, they
Sunday supple-
write these pieces, in the rears of magazines, in glossy
ments of newspapers, over and over and on and on, like a needle stuck in a phonograph record." But truly good humor, charged with outlandish hooks and unexpected sharp ridicules
come
jabs,
is
bound
to offend, for, in the nature of things,
our prejudices and popular
institutions. Alas,
so touchy that to be irreverent these days
is
it
people have be-
to invite
an outraged
from some pompous organization or another. Even being funny about porcupines can be risky. "Just try it," wrote P. G. Wodehouse, "and see how quickly you find your letter-box full of communications beginning: 'Sir, With reference to your recent tasteless and uncalled-for comments on the porcupine ..." retort
A
retired
New
Yorker editor recently told
delightful piece "Hassidic Tales, with a
Guide
me
that
Woody
Allen's
to Their Interpretation
by
the Noted Scholar," which pokes fun at supposedly sage but actually
simpleminded rabbinical
fables, led to a
Allen of being anti-Semitic.
I
know
batch of angry
letters
accusing
the feeling. Once, reviewing (for the
now-defunct BooJ^ V/eek) an unintentionally hilarious book. Encyclopewhile I did not think it dia of Jews in Sport, I ventured to remark that it a good thing to hide our athletic accomplishments under a bushel
—
was unnecessary, perhaps, HERTZ, STEVE ALLAN.
to include:
Infielder, b. Feb. 26, 1945, in
Played for Houston in 1964. Total Games:
In the weeks that followed, favorite
coming from
questioning
my
a lady
gender
—
who
I
5.
Dayton, Ohio.
Batting Average: .000.
was overwhelmed by abusive mail,
signed herself A
as well as
my
taste.
I
my
fellow Jewess, thereby can only wonder, then,
one of the most talented of the new American humorists, Roy Blount, Jr., earned when he wrote of the first Carter campaign: ". when Earl Butz was quoted as saying that all black folks want is 'a tight pussy, loose shoes, and a warm place to shit,' I wish Jimmy had responded by saying it sounded like a set of priorities that a lot of people
what
sort of letters
.
.
could identify with."
For
all I
know, Blount
is still
in hiding.
Foreword
xviii
How's it done? That superb stylist A.
to-write" books for review by
an
editor,
note that read, "The only way to write
own damn business." The truth is, there practitioner
been sent a batch of "howbounced them right back with a
Liebling, having
J.
is
well
and how you do
no explaining how it's done; and only a foolish would dare to take his own machine apart he might never is
—
be able to put
it
together again.
Instead of asking
how
it's
grateful for what's available.
done, we should, in these grim times, be
And
what's available
pleasures and sharp disappointments.
was
It
was
difficult,
some of these
pieces
difficult,
perhaps even un-
but necessary. Unfortunately,
somehow
first-rate.
both unanticipated
me up
to reread, in a cold editorial light, essays that broke
years ago. find
It
sometimes
is
me
Collecting material for this anthology gave
fair,
your
it is
it
also led
thirty
me
To go through good many of
wanting, dated.
revered Benchley, for instance, was to discover a
to
the his
sketches astonishingly bland, so disarmingly gentle as to dissolve into the
middle distance even before
something of Benchley's
you
will
me
I
I
got to the last line.
liked,
I
finally did
and have included
meet with no Dorothy Parker
here.
it
come
across
in these pages.
The legendary Miss
But
Parker
found her comic stories brittle, short on substance, and, to come clean, no longer very funny; and I can't help wondering how many of her devoted admirers have read her gave
endless trouble. I'm afraid
I
recently.
Put plainly, there was only one basic criterion (however imperfect) for the selection of the material that follows here.
laugh
— sometimes
of coffee, which
at
It
had
seven o'clock in the morning, before
may have been
to
make me
my
first
cup
Beyond that, I did There would be no cartoons or comic verse, playing dirty pool.
impose certain limitations. not because I don't enjoy them, but because I have a natural predilection for comic prose and wanted to include as much of it as possible. I also decided, arbitrarily, to begin with Leacock, Baring,
Mencken, Runyon
and Wodehouse, and then to move on to the younger humorists, giving the most consideration to people who have been writing during the last twenty years. I have used the simplest possible chronology, laying out the selections in order of the writers' birthdates from Leacock, born in
—
1869, to Ian Frazier, I
who came
along as recently as 1951.
had a good deal of help
especially like to thank Clifton
in
compiling
this
anthology.
I
would
Fadiman, Bob Gottlieb, Gordon Lish,
Foreword
xix
Roger Angell, and William Zinsser for their many suggestions. I am also grateful to Martha Kaplan at Knopf, Tina Angelico at the Book-of-theMonth Club, and Helen Stark of The New Yorker for the considerable help they gave
me
in tracking
down
responsibility for the selections
is,
out-of-print stories
of course, mine.
and books. Final
THE BEST OF
MODERN
HUMOR
Stephen Leacock GERTRUDE THE GOVERNESS OR SIMPLE SEVENTEEN
Synopsis of Previous Chapters:
There are no Previous Chapters.
was a wild and stormy night on the West Coast of Scotland. This, however, is immaterial to the present story, as the scene is not laid in the It
West of Scotland. For the matter of that the weather was
just as
bad on
the East Coast of Ireland.
But the scene of this narrative is laid in the South of England and takes place in and around Knotacentinum Towers (pronounced as if written
Nosham
Taws), the seat of Lord Knotacent (pronounced as
if
written Nosh).
But
it is
not necessary to pronounce either of these names in read-
ing them.
Nosham Taws was
a typical English
home. The main
part of the
house was an Elizabethan structure of warm red brick, while the elder portion, of which the Earl was inordinately proud, still showed the outlines of a Norman Keep, to which had been added a Lancastrian Jail and
Orphan Asylum. From
house in all directions stretched magnificent woodland and park with oaks and elms of immemorial antiquity, while nearer the house stood raspberry bushes and a
Plantagenet
the
geranium plants which had been set out by the Crusaders. About the grand old mansion the air was loud with the chirping of thrushes, the cawing of partridges and the clear sweet note of the rook, while deer, antelope, and other quadrupeds strutted about the lawn so tame as to eat off the sun-dial. In fact, the place was a regular menagerie. From the house downwards through the park stretched a beautiful broad avenue laid out by Henry VII.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
2
Lord Nosh stood upon the hearthrug of the library. Trained diplomat and statesman as he was, his stern aristocratic face was upside down with fury.
"Boy," he said, "you shall marry are
this girl or
I
You
disinherit you.
no son of mine."
Young Lord Ronald, fiant as his "I
erect before him, flung back a glance as de-
own.
defy you," he said. "Henceforth you are no father of mine.
get another.
will marr\'
— have never seen I
none but
a
woman
I
can
love.
This
girl
that
"Fool," said the Earl, "would you throw aside our estate and
of a thousand years?
The
girl,
I
am
told,
is
beautiful; her aunt
is
I
will
we
name
willing;
they are French; pah! they understand such things in France."
"But your reason
—
no reason," said the Earl. "Listen, Ronald, I give you one month. For that time you remain here. If at the end of it you refuse me, I cut you off with a shilling." Lord Ronald said nothing; he flung himself from the room, flung himself upon his horse and rode madly off in all directions. As the door of the library closed upon Ronald the Earl sank into a chair. His face changed. It was no longer that of the haught>- nobleman, but of the hunted criminal. "He must marry the girl," he muttered. "Soon she will know all. Tutchemoff has escaped from Siberia. He knows and will tell. The whole of the mines pass to her, this property- with it, and I but enough." He rose, walked to the sideboard, drained a dipper full of gin and bitters, and became again a high-bred English gentleman. It was at this moment that a high dogcart, driven by a groom in the livery of Earl Nosh, might have been seen entering the avenue of Nosham Taws. Beside him sat a young girl, scarce more than a child, in "I give
—
fact not nearly so big as the
The
groom.
which she wore, surmounted with black willow plumes, concealed from view a face so face-like in its appearance as to be positively facial. It was need we say it Gertrude the Governess, who was this day to enter upon her duties at Nosham Taws. At the same time that the dogcart entered the a^•enue at one end there might have been seen riding down it from the other a tall young man, whose long, aristocratic face proclaimed his birth and who was mounted upon a horse with a face even longer than his own. And who is this tall young man who draws nearer to Gertrude with every revolution of the horse? Ah, who, indeed? Ah, who, who? I wonder apple-pie hat
—
—
Stephen Leacock
my
any of
if
3
readers could guess that this was
none other than Lord
Ronald.
The two were destined to meet. Nearer and nearer they came. And then still nearer. Then for one brief moment they met. As they passed, Gertrude raised her head and directed towards the young nobleman two eyes so eye-like in their expression as to be absolutely circular, while
Lord Ronald directed towards the occupant of the dogcart like that
a gaze so gaze-
nothing but a gazelle, or a gas-pipe, could have emulated
its
intensity.
Was
this
the
dawn
of love? Wait and see.
Do
not spoil the story.
DeMongmorenci McFiggin had known neither father nor mother. They had both died years before she was born. Of her mother she knew nothing, save that she was Let us speak of Gertrude. Gertrude
French, was extremely beautiful, and that
all
her ancestors and even her
business acquaintances had perished in the Revolution.
Yet Gertrude cherished the the
girl
wore
a locket in
down her neck
while
She
memory
of her parents.
which was enshrined
inside at the
On
her breast
a miniature of her
mother,
back hung a daguerreotype of her
grandmother up her sleeve and had pictures of her cousins tucked inside her boot, while beneath her but enough, quite enough. Of her father Gertrude knew even less. That he was a high-born English gentleman who had lived as a wanderer in many lands, this was father.
carried a portrait of her
—
all
a
she knew. His only legacy to Gertrude had been a Russian grammar,
Roumanian phrase-book,
a theodolite,
and a work on mining engi-
neering.
From her aunt.
had
earliest infancy
Her aunt had
also taught her
When
Gertrude had been brought up by her
carefully instructed her in Christian principles.
Mohammedanism
to
make
She
sure.
Gertrude was seventeen her aunt had died of hydrophobia.
The circumstances were
man
mysterious. There had called
upon her
costume of the Russians. After he had left, Gertrude had found her aunt in a syncope from which she passed into an apostrophe and never recovered. To avoid scandal it was called hydrophobia. Gertrude was thus thrown upon the world. What to do? That was the problem that conthat day a strange bearded
in the
fronted her.
was while musing one day upon her struck with an advertisement. It
fate that Gertrude's eye
was
"Wanted a governess; must possess a knowledge of French, Italian, Russian, and Roumanian, Music, and Mining Engineering. Salary £1, 4
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
4
and 4 pence halfpenny per annum. Apply between half-past eleven and twenty-five minutes to twelve at No. 41 A Decimal Six, Belgravia Terrace. The Countess of Nosh." Gertrude was a girl of great natural quickness of apprehension, and she had not pondered over this announcement more than half an hour shillings
before she was struck with the extraordinary coincidence between the list
of items desired and the things that she herself knew.
ess,
She duly presented herself at Belgravia Terrace before the Countwho advanced to meet her with a charm which at once placed the her ease.
girl at
"You
are proficient in French?" she asked.
"Oh, oui" said Gertrude modestly. "And Italian?" continued the Countess. "Ofi,
si" said Gertrude.
"And German?" "A/z, ;d," said
said the
Countess
in delight.
Gertrude.
"And Russian?" "Ydw."
"And Roumanian?"
Amazed
at
the
girl's
extraordinary proficiency in
the Countess looked at her narrowly.
modern languages,
Where had she seen
ments before? She passed her hand over her brow
those linea-
in thought,
and
spit
upon the floor, but no, the face baffled her. "Enough," she said, "I engage you on the spot; tomorrow you go down to Nosham Taws and begin teaching the children. I must add that in addition you will be expected to aid the Earl with his Russian correspondence.
He
has large mining interests at Tschminsk."
Tschminsk! why did the simple word reverberate upon Gertrude's ears? title
Why? Because
it
was the name written
page of his book on mining. It
in her father's
What mystery was
hand on the
here?
was on the following day that Gertrude had driven up the avenue.
She descended from the dogcart, passed through a phalanx of liveried servants drawn up seven-deep, to each of whom she gave a sovereign as she passed and entered Nosham Taws. "Welcome," said the Countess, as she aided Gertrude to carry her trunk upstairs.
The
girl
presently descended and was ushered into the library,
where she was presented
to the Earl.
As soon
as the Earl's eye fell
upon
new governess he started visibly. Where had he seen those lineaments? Where was it? At the races? or the theatre? on a bus? No. the face of the
Stephen Leacock
Some
subtler thread of
memory was
stirring in his
hastily to the sideboard, drained a dipper
became again the
5
and
mind.
He
strode
a half of brandy,
and
perfect English gentleman.
While Gertrude has gone to the nursery to make the acquaintance of the two tiny golden-haired children who are to be her charges, let us say something here of the Earl and his son. Lord Nosh was the perfect type of the English nobleman and statesman. The years that he had spent in the diplomatic service at Constantinople, St. Petersburg, and Salt Lake City had given to him a peculiar finesse and noblesse, while his long residence at St. Helena, Pitcairn Island, and Hamilton, Ontario, had rendered him impervious to external impressions. As deputy paymaster of the militia of the county he had
seen something of the sterner side of military office of
Groom
life,
while his hereditary
of the Sunday Breeches had brought
contact with Royalty
him
into direct
itself.
A
keen
pig-killing,
bat-
His passion for outdoor sports endeared him to his tenants.
sportsman, he excelled in fox-hunting, dog-hunting, catching and the pastimes of his In this latter respect Lord start
the lad had
shown the
class.
Ronald took
From the At Eton he had made a
after his father.
greatest promise.
splendid showing at battledore and shuttlecock, and at Cambridge had
been
first
in his class at needlework. Already his
name was whispered
in
connection with the All England ping-pong championship, a triumph
which would undoubtedly carry with it a seat in Parliament. Thus was Gertrude the Governess installed at Nosham Taws. The days and the weeks sped past. The simple charm of the beautiful orphan girl attracted all hearts. Her two little pupils became her slaves. "Me loves 00," the little Rasehellfrida would say, leaning her golden head in Gertrude's lap. Even the servants loved her. The head gardener would bring a bouquet of beautiful roses to her room before she was up, the second gardener a bunch of early cauliflowers, the third a spray of late asparagus, and even the tenth and eleventh a sprig of mangel-wurzel or an armful of hay. Her room was full of gardeners all the time, while at evening the aged butler, touched at the friendless girl's loneliness, would tap softly at her door to bring her a rye whisky and seltzer or a box of Pittsburg Stogies. Even the dumb creatures seemed to admire her in their own dumb way. The dumb rooks settled on her shoulder and every dumb dog around the place followed her.
And spoken.
Ronald! ah, Ronald! Yes, indeed! They had met. They had
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
6
"What
a dull morning," Gertrude
had
said. ''Quel triste
matin!
Was
fur ein allerverdamnter Tag!"
Ronald had answered. "Beastly!!" The word rang in Gertrude's ears all day. After that they were constantly together. They played tennis and ping-pong in the day, and in the evening, in accordance with the stiff routine of the place, they sat down with the Earl and Countess to twentyfive-cent poker, and later still they sat together on the verandah and watched the moon sweeping in great circles around the horizon. It was not long before Gertrude realized that Lord Ronald felt towards her a warmer feeling than that of mere ping-pong. At times in her "Beastly,"
presence he would
fall,
especially after dinner, into a
fit
of profound
subtraction.
Once
at night,
when Gertrude withdrew
to her
chamber and before
seeking her pillow, prepared to retire as a preliminary to disrobing
—
in
other words, before going to bed, she flung wide the casement (opened the window) and perceived (saw) the face of Lord Ronald.
on
a thorn
bush beneath her, and
his
He was
sitting
upturned face wore an expression
of agonized pallor.
Meantime the days
passed. Life at the
Taws moved
in the ordinary
routine of a great English household. At 7 a gong sounded for rising, at
horn blew for breakfast, at 8:30 a whistle sounded for prayers, at 1 a flag was run up at half-mast for lunch, at 4 a gun was fired for afternoon tea, at 9 a first bell sounded for dressing, at 9:15 a second bell for going on dressing, while at 9:30 a rocket was sent up to indicate that dinner was ready. At midnight dinner was over and at 1 a.m. the tolling of a bell 8 a
summoned
the domestics to evening prayers.
Meanwhile the month
by the Earl to Lord Ronald was
was already July 15, then within a day or two it was July and, almost immediately afterwards, July 18. At times the Earl, in passing Ronald in the hall, would say sternly,
passing away. 17,
allotted
It
"Remember, boy, your consent,
And what were
or
I
disinherit you."
the Earl's thoughts of Gertrude? Here was the one
cup of happiness. For some reason that she could not divine, the Earl showed signs of marked antipathy. Once as she passed the door of the library he threw a bootjack at her. On another occasion at lunch alone with her he struck her savagely
drop of bitterness in the
girl's
across the face with a sausage. It
was her duty
She sought in handed to the
it
to translate to the Earl his Russian correspondence.
in vain for the mystery.
Earl.
Gertrude translated
One it
to
day a Russian telegram was
him
aloud.
Stephen Leacock
"Tutchemoff went
On
to the
hearing this the Earl
7
woman. She is dead." became livid with fury,
in fact this
was the
day that he struck her with the sausage.
Then one day
who was
while the Earl was absent on a bat hunt, Gertrude,
turning over his correspondence, with that sweet feminine in-
stinct of interest that rose superior to ill-treatment,
suddenly found the
key to the mystery.
Lord Nosh was not the
owner of the Taws. His distant cousin of the older line, the true heir, had died in a Russian prison to which the machinations of the Earl, while Ambassador at Tschminsk, had consigned him. The daughter of this cousin was the true owner of rightful
Nosham Taws. The family story, save only that the documents before the name of the rightful heir, lay bare to Gertrude's eye. Strange
is
the heart of
woman. Did Gertrude turn from
own
sad fate had taught her sympathy.
with spurning? No. Her
Yet
still
her withheld
the mystery remained!
Why
did the Earl start perceptibly
each time that he looked into her face? Sometimes he started as four centimetres, so that
one could
distinctly see
occasions he would hastily drain a dipper of
was the night of the great
ball at
him do
it.
as
much
On
such
rum and Vichy water and
become again the correct English gentleman. The denouement came swiftly. Gertrude never It
the Earl
forgot
it.
Nosham Taws. The whole
neighbourhood was invited. How Gertrude's heart had beat with anticipation, and with what trepidation she had overhauled her scant wardrobe in order to appear not unworthy in Lord Ronald's eyes. Her resources were poor indeed, yet the inborn genius for dress that she inherited from her French mother stood her in good stead. She twined a single rose in her hair and contrived herself a dress out of a few old newspapers and the inside of an umbrella that would have graced a court. Round her waist she
bound
a single braid of bagstring, while a piece of old lace that
had been her mother's was suspended to her ear by a thread. Gertrude was the cynosure of all eyes. Floating to the strains of the music she presented a picture of bright girlish innocence that no one could see undisenraptured.
The
ball
was
at
its
height.
It
was away up!
Ronald stood with Gertrude
one another's
in the shrubbery.
They looked
into
eyes.
"Gertrude," he
said, "I love
Simple words, and yet they
you." thrilled every fibre in the girl's
"Ronald!" she said, and cast herself about his neck.
costume.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
8
At
this
moment
the Earl appeared standing beside
them
in the
moonlight. His stern face was distorted with indignation. "So!" he said, turning to Ronald, "I
"it
appears that you have chosen!"
have," said Ronald with hauteur.
"You
prefer to marry this penniless
have selected for you." Gertrude looked from father
girl
to son in
rather than the heiress
I
amazement.
"Yes," said Ronald.
"Be it so," said the Earl, draining a dipper of gin which he carried, and resuming his calm. "Then I disinherit you. Leave this place, and never return to
it."
"Come, Gertrude,"
Ronald tenderly, "let us flee together." Gertrude stood before them. The rose had fallen from her head. The lace had fallen from her ear and the bagstring had come undone from her waist. Her newspapers were crumpled beyond recognition. But dishevelled and illegible as she was, she was still mistress of herself. "Never," she said firmly. "Ronald, you shall never make this sacrifice for me." Then to the Earl, in tones of ice, "There is a pride, sir, as great even as yours. The daughter of Metschnikoff McFiggin need crave a
said
boon from no one." With that she hauled from her bosom the daguerreotype of her
father and pressed
The
it
to her lips.
Earl started as
if
shot.
"That name!" he
cried, "that face! that
photograph! stop!" There! There vined
it.
is
no need
Gertrude was the
to finish;
my
readers have long since di-
heiress.
The lovers fell into one another's arms. The Earl's proud face relaxed. "God bless you," he said. The Countess and the guests came pouring out upon the lawn. The breaking day illuminated a scene of gay congratulations.
Gertrude and Ronald were wed. Their happiness was complete.
Need we
more? Yes, only this. The Earl was killed in the huntingfield a few days after. The Countess was struck by lightning. The two children fell down a well. Thus the happiness of Gertrude and Ronald was complete. say
Maurice Baring KING LEAR'S DAUGHTER
LETTER FROM GONERIL, DAUGHTER OF KING LEAR, TO HER SISTER REGAN I
have writ
my
sister.
King Lear, Act
I,
Scene
iv.
The Palace, November. Dearest Regan, I
am
sending you
this letter
by Oswald.
We
have been having the
most trying time lately with Papa, and it ended today in one of those scenes which are so painful to people like you and me, who hate scenes. I am writing now to tell you all about it, so that you may be prepared. This is what has happened. When Papa came here he brought a hundred knights with him, which is a great deal more than we could put up, and some of them had to live in the village. The first thing that happened was that they quarrelled with our people and refused to take orders from them, and whenif it was one of Papa's ever one told any one to do anything it was either men "not his place to do it"; or if it was one of our men, they said that Papa's people made work impossible. For instance, only the day before yesterday I found that blue vase which you brought back from Dover for me on my last birthday broken to bits. Of course I made a fuss, and Oswald declared that one of Papa's knights had knocked it over in a drunken brawl. I complained to Papa, who flew into a passion and said that his knights, and in fact all his retainers, were the most peaceful and courteous people in the world, and that it was my fault, as I was not treating him or them with the respect which they deserved. He even said
—
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
lO
that I
was lacking
I
in
filial
duty.
I
was determined
to
keep
my
temper, so
said nothing.
The day after this the chief steward and the housekeeper and both my maids came to me and said that they wished to give notice. I asked them why. They said they couldn't possibly live in a house where there were such "goings-on." I asked them what they meant. They refused to say,
insolent but in a positively
men
were behaving not only in an outrageous manner to them. The steward said
but they hinted that Papa's
were never sober, that they had entirely demoralized the household, and that life was simply not worth living in the house; it was impossible to get anything done, and they couldn't sleep at night for that Papa's knights
the noise.
went to Papa and talked to him about it quite quietly, but no sooner had I mentioned the subject than he lost all self-control, and began to abuse me. I kept my temper as long as I could, but of course one is only human, and after I had borne his revilings for some time, which were monstrously unfair and untrue, I at last turned and said something about people of his age being trying. Upon which he said that I was mocking him in his old age, that I was a monster of ingratitude and he began to cry. I cannot tell you how painful all this was to me. I did everything I could to soothe him and quiet him, but the truth is, ever since Papa has been here he has lost control of his wits. He suffers from the oddest kind of delusions. He thinks that for some reason he is being treated like a beggar; and although he has a hundred knights I
hundred, mind you!
(a
who do nothing but
eat
great deal
and drink
more than we have) all
—
—
in the house,
day long, he says he
is
not being
do hate unfairness. When he gave up the crown he said he was tired of affairs, and meant to have a long rest; but from the very moment that he handed over the management of affairs to us he never stopped interfering, and was cross if he was not consulted about everything, and if his advice was treated like a King!
I
not taken.
And what is still worse: ever since his last illness he has lost not only his memory but his control over language, so that often when he wants to say one thing he says just the opposite, and sometimes when he wishes some quite simple thing he uses bad language quite unconsciously. Of course we are used to this, and we don't mind, but I must say it is very awkward when strangers are here. For instance, the other day beto say
fore quite a lot of people, quite unconsciously,
name. Everybody was uncomfortable and
he
called
me
tried not to laugh,
people could not contain themselves. This sort of thing
is
a dreadful
but some constantly
Maurice Baring
happening. So you
will
ii
understand that Papa needs perpetual looking
and management. At the same time, the moment one suggests the slightest thing to him he boils over with rage. But perhaps the most annoying thing which happened lately, or, at least, the thing which happens to annoy me most, is Papa's Fool. You know, darling, that I have always hated that kind of humour. He comes in just as one is sitting down to dinner, and beats one on the head with a hard, empty bladder, and sings utterly idiotic songs, which make me feel inclined to cry. The other day, when we had a lot of people here, just as after
we were
sitting
down
in the banqueting-hall, Papa's Fool pulled
my chair
from behind me so that I fell sharply down on the floor. Papa shook with laughter, and said: "Well done, little Fool," and all the courtiers who were there, out of pure snobbishness, of course, laughed too. I call this not only very humiliating for me, but undignified in an old king; of course
bands, he
is
Albany refused
to interfere. Like
all
man and
men and
all
a
hus-
an arrant coward.
came yesterday. I had got a bad headache, and my room, when Papa came in from the hunt and sent
However, the was lying down
in
crisis
Oswald to me, saying that he wished to speak to me. I said that I wasn't which was perfectly true but that I well, and that I was lying down would be down to dinner. When Oswald went to give my message Papa beat him, and one of his men threw him about the room and really hurt him, so that he has now got a large bruise on his forehead and a sprained
—
—
ankle.
This was the climax. All our knights came to Albany and myself,
and
said that they
would not
stay with us a
moment
longer unless Papa
some sort of control over his men. I did not know what to do, but I knew the situation would have to be cleared up sooner or later. So I went to Papa and told him frankly that the situation was intolerable; that he must send away some of his people, and choose for the remainder men fitting to his age. The words were scarcely out of my mouth than exercised
he called me the most terrible names, ordered his horses to be saddled, and said that he would shake the dust from his feet and not stay a moment longer in this house. Albany tried to calm him, and begged him to stay, but he would not listen to a word, and said he would go and live with you.
So I am sending this by Oswald, that you may get it before Papa arrives and know how the matter stands. All I did was to suggest he should send away fifty of his men. Even fifty is a great deal, and puts us to any amount of inconvenience, and is a source of waste and extravagance two things which I cannot bear. I am perfectly certain you will
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
12
not be able to put up with his hundred knights any more than I
beg you,
my
No one
dearest Regan, to do your best to
fonder of him than
I
make Papa
was.
And
listen to
would have been difficult to find a more dutiful daughter than I have always been. But there is a limit to all things, and one cannot have one's whole household turned into a pandemonium, and one's whole life into a series of wrangles, complaints, and brawls, simply because Papa in his old age is losing the control of his faculties. At the same time, I own that although I kept my temper for a long time, when it finally gave way I was perhaps a little sharp. I am not a saint, nor an angel, nor a lamb, but I do hate unfairness and injustice. It makes my blood boil. But I hope that you, with your angelic nature and your tact and your gentleness, will put everything right and make poor Papa listen to reason. Let me hear at once what happens. sense.
is
I
am.
I
think
it
Your loving GONERIL.
— Another thing Papa does
which
most exasperating is to quote Cordelia to one every moment. He keeps on saying: "If only Cordelia were here," or "How unlike Cordelia!" And you will remember, darling, that when Cordelia was here Papa could not endure the sight of her. Her irritating trick of mumbling and never speaking up used to get terribly on his nerves. Of course, I thought he was even rather unfair on her, trying as she is. We had a letter from the French Court yesterday, saying that she is driving the poor King of France almost mad. P.P.S. It is wretched weather. The poor little ponies on the heath will have to be brought in. P.S.
—
is
H. L. Mencken RECOLLECTIONS OF NOTABLE COPS
Some
time ago
I
New
read in a
York paper that
fifty
or sixty college
graduates had been appointed to the metropolitan police force, and were
being well spoken of by their superiors.
my reportorial days there was
The news
astonished me, for in
simply no such thing in America as a book-
good many who were very smart. The force was then recruited, not from the groves of Academe, but from the ranks of workingmen. The best police captain I ever knew in Baltimore was a meat-cutter by trade, and had lost one of his thumbs by a slip of his cleaver, and the next best was a former bartender. All the mounted cops were ex-hostlers passing as ex-cavalrymen, and all the harbor police had come up through the tugboat and garbage-scow branches of the learned cop, though
I
knew
a
merchant marine. It took a young reporter a little while to learn how to read and interpret the reports that cops turned in, for they were couched in a special kind of English, with a spelling peculiar to
itself. If
a
member
of what was then called "the finest" had spelled larceny in any way save larsensy, or arson in fraxr,
any way save arsony, or fracture
in
any way save
there would have been a considerable lifting of eyebrows.
recall the
horror of the Baltimore cops
when
the
first
I
well
board to examine
on the force was set up. It was a harmless body headed by a political dentist, and the hardest question in its first examination paper was "What is the plural of ox?" but all the cops in town predicted that it would quickly contaminate their craft with a great horde of what they called "professors," and reduce it to the level of letterapplicants for places
carrying or school-teaching.
But, as
I
have noted, their innocence of
literae
humaniores was not
and from some of them, in fact, I learned the valuable lesson that sharp wits can lurk in unpolished skulls. I knew necessarily a sign of stupidity,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
14
who were matches
most learned and unscrupulous lawyers at the Baltimore bar, and others who had made monkeys of the oldest and crabbedest judges on the bench, and were generally respected for it. Moreover, I knew cops who were really first-rate policemen, and loved their trade as tenderly as so many art artists or movie actors. They were badly paid, but they carried on their dismal work with unflagging diligence, and loved a long, hard chase almost as much as they loved a quick, brisk clubbing. Their one salient failing, taking them as a class, was their belief that any person who had been arrested, even on mere suspicion, was unquestionably and ipso facto guilty. But that theory, though it occasionally colored their testimony in a garish manner, was grounded, after all, on nothing worse than professional pride and esprit de corps, and I am certainly not one to hoot at it, for my own belief in the mission of journalism has no better support than the same partiality, and all the logic I am aware of stands against it. In those days that pestilence of Service which torments the American people today was just getting under way, and many of the multifarcops
ious duties
now
for the
carried
out by social workers,
officers, visiting nurses, psychologists,
statisticians,
truant
and the vast rabble of inspectors, hundred different faculties either
and bogus experts of a fell to the police or were not discharged at all. An ordinary flatfoot in a quiet residential section had his hands full. In a single day he might have to put out a couple of kitchen fires, arrange for the removal of a dead mule, guard a poor epileptic having a fit on the sidewalk, catch a runaway horse, settle a combat with table knives between husband and wife, shoot a cat for killing pigeons, rescue a dog or a baby from a sewer, bawl out a white-wings for spilling garbage, keep order on the sidewalk at two or three funerals, and flog half a dozen bad boys for throwing horse-apples at a blind man. The cops downtown, especially along the wharves and in the red-light districts, had even more curious and complicated jobs, and smellers, spies
some of them As
my memory
office that
Spring.
attained to a high degree of virtuosity.
It
gropes backward
I
think, for example, of a strange
an old-time roundsman named Charlie had to undertake every was to pick up enough skilled workmen to effect the annual
Along about May 1 the warden would telephone to police headquarters that he needed, say, ten head of painters, five plumbers, two blacksmiths, a tilesetter, a roofer, a bricklayer, a carpenter and a locksmith, and it was Charlie's duty to go out and find them. So far as I can recall, he never failed, and usually he produced two or three times as many craftsmen of each category as were needed, so that the warden had some chance to redecoration and refurbishing of the Baltimore City
Jail.
H. L.
Mencken
pick out good ones. His plan was simply to
15
make
a tour of the saloons
and stews in the Marsh Market section of Baltimore, and look over the drunks in congress assembled. He had a trained eye, and could detect a plumber or a painter through two weeks' accumulation of beard and dirt. As he gathered in his candidates, he searched them on the spot, rejecting those who had no union cards, for he was a firm believer in organized labor. Those who passed were put into storage at a police-station, and there kept
(less
the unfortunates
who developed
delirium tremens and
had to be handed over to the resurrection-men) until the whole convoy was ready. The next morning Gene Grannan, the police magistrate, gave them two weeks each for vagrancy, loitering, trespass, committing a nuisance, or some other plausible misdemeanor, the warden had his staff of master- workmen, and the jail presently bloomed out in all its vernal finery.
Some lie
of these
recognized so
toilers
many
returned year after year, and in the end Char-
that he could accumulate the better part of his
convoy in half an hour. Once, I remember, he was stumped by a call for two electricians. In those remote days there were fewer men of that craft in practice than today, and only one could be found. When the warden put on the heat Charlie sent him a trolley-car motorman who had run away from his wife and was trying to be shanghaied for the Chesapeake oyster-fleet. This poor man, being grateful for his security in jail, made such eager use of his meagre electrical knowledge that the warden decided to keep him, and even requested that his sentence be extended. Unhappily, Gene Grannan was a pretty good amateur lawyer, and knew that such an extension would be illegal. When the warden of the House of Correction, which was on a farm twenty miles from Baltimore, heard how well this system was working, he put in a requisition for six experienced milkers and a choirleader, for he had a herd of cows and his colored prisoners loved to sing spirituals. Charlie found the choirleader in
no
time, but he bucked at hunting for milkers, and got rid of the
nuisance by sending the warden a squad of sailors
who
almost pulled the
poor cows to pieces.
Gene had been made a magistrate as one of the first rising reform movement in Baltimore, and was a man of integrity,
but he knew too
much
fruits
of the
the chastest
about reformers to admire them, and
no chance to afflict them. When, in 1900, or thereabout, a gang of snoopers began to tour the red-light districts, seeking to harass and alarm the poor working women there denizened, he instructed the gals to empty slops on them, and acquitted all who were brought in for doing it, usually on the ground that the complaining witnesses were disreputable
lost
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l6
persons, and could not be believed
on
oath.
One day,
sitting in his
frowsy
saw him gloat in a positively indecent manner when a Methodist clergv'man was led out from the cells by Mike Hogan, the turnkey. This holy man, believing that the Jews, unless they consented to be baptized, would all go to Hell, had opened a mission in what was then still called the Ghetto, and sought to save them. The adults, of courtroom,
I
course, refused to have anything to do with him, but he managed, after a while, to lure a
number
of kosher small boys into his den, chiefly by
showing them magic-lantern pictures of the Buffalo Bill country and the Holy Land. When their fathers heard of this there was naturally an uproar, for a
Goy
it
Schul.
was a mortal
The
ritual for
an orthodox Jew to enter delousing offenders was an arduous one, and
sin in those days for
and money. So the Jews came clamoring to Grannan, and he spent a couple of hours tr>'ing to figure out some charge to lay against the evangelist. Finally, he ordered him brought in, and entered him on the books for "annoying persons passing by and along a public highway, disorderly conduct, making loud and unseemly noises, and disturbing religious worship." He had to be acquitted, of course, but Gene scared him so badly with talk of the penitentiary that he shut down his mission forthwith, and left the Jews to their post-mortem sufferings. As I have noted in Chapter II, Gene was a high favorite among us young reporters, for he was always good for copy, and did not hesitate to modify the course of justice in order to feed and edifv- us. One day an ancient German, obviously a highly respectable man, was brought in on the incredible charge of beating his wife. The testimony showed that they had been placidly married for more than 45 years, and seldom exchanged so much as a bitter word. But the night before, when the old man came home from the saloon where he played Skat every evening, the old woman accused him of having drunk more than his usual ration of eight beers, and in the course of the ensuing debate he gave her a gentle slap. Astounded, she let off an hysterical squawk, an officious neighbor rushed in, the cops came on his heels, and so the old man stood before the bar of justice, weeping copiously and with his wife weeping even more copiously beside him. Gene pondered the evidence with a frown on his face, and then announced his judgment. "The crime you are accused of committing," he said, "is a foul and desperate one, and the laws of all civilized countries prohibit it under heavy penalties. I could send you to prison for life, I could order you to the whipping-post [it still exists in Maryland, and for wife-beaters only], or I could sentence you to be hanged. [Here both parties screamed.] But inasmuch as this is your first offense I will be lenient. You will be taken hence to the House cost both time
H. L.
Mencken
17
of Correction, and there confined for twenty years. In addition, you are fined $10,000." The old couple missed the fine, for at mention of the
House of Correction both fainted. When the cops revived them. Gene told the prisoner that, on reflection, he had decided to strike out the sentence, and bade him go and sin no more. Husband and wife rushed out of the courtroom hand in hand, followed by a cop with the umbrella and market-basket that the old woman had forgotten. A week or two later news came in that she was ordering the old man about in a highly manner, and had cut down his evenings of Skat to four a week. The cops liked and admired Gene, and when he was in good form he commonly had a gallery of them in his courtroom, guffawing at his whimsies. But despite his popularity among them he did not pal with them, for he was basically a very dignified, and even somewhat stiff fellow, and knew how to call them down sharply when their testimony before him went too far beyond the bounds of the probable. In those days, as in these, policemen led a social life almost as inbred as that of the justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, and outsiders were seldom admitted to their parties. But reporters were exceptions, and I attended a number of cop soirees of great elegance, with the tables piled mountain-high with all the delicacies of the season, and a keg of beer every few feet. The graft of these worthy men, at least in my time, was a great deal less than reformers alleged and the envious common cavalier
people believed. Most of them, in
my
judgment, were very honest
fel-
bounds of reason. Those who patrolled the fishmarkets naturally had plenty of fish to eat, and those who manned the police-boats in the harbor took a certain toll from the pungy captains who brought up Baltimore's supplies of watermelons, cantaloupes, vegetables, crabs and oysters from the Eastern Shore of Maryland: indeed, this last impost amounted to a kind of octroi, and at one time the harbor force accumulated so much provender that they had to seize an empty warehouse on the waterfront to store it. But the pungy captains gave up uncomplainingly, for the pelagic cops protected them against the thieves and highjackers who swarmed in the harbor, and also against the land police. I never heard of cops getting anything that the donor was not quite willing and even eager to give. Every Italian who ran a peanut stand knew that making them free of it was good institutional promotion and the girls in the red-light districts liked to crochet neckties, socks and pulse-warmers for them. It was not unheard of for a cop to get mashed on such a girl, rescue her from her life of shame, and set her up as a more or less honest woman. I knew of several cases in which holy matrimony followed. But the more ambitious girls, of course, looked higher. lows, at least within the
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l8
and some of them,
in
my
made
time,
very good marriages.
One
actually
married a banker, and another died only a few years ago as the faithful and much respected wife of a prominent physician. The cops always
when
laughed
reformers alleged that the wages of sin were death
women who
— spe-
ended in the gutter, full of dope and despair. They knew that the overwhelming majority ended at the altar of God, and that nearly all of them married better men than they could have had any chance of meeting and roping if they had
cifically,
that
sold their persons always
kept their virtue.
One
dismal
New
Year's
Day
to pocket $138.66 in cash
cause
lost
the
same chance
at
saw a sergeant lose an excellent
money: I remember it brilliantly bethe same moment. There had been the
chance I
I
usual epidemic of suicides in the waterfront flop-houses, for the a
new
year turns the thoughts of homeless
men
dawn of
beyond the coroner on a
to peace
accompanied the sergeant and a tour of the fatal scenes. One of the dead men was lying on the fifth floor of a decaying warehouse that had been turned into ten-cent sleeping quarters, and we climbed up the long stairs to inspect him. All the other bums had cleared out, and the hophead clerk did not offer to go with us. We found the deceased stretched out in a peaceful attitude, with the rope with which he had hanged himself still around his neck. He had been cut down, but then abandoned. The sergeant loosed the rope, and began a search of the dead man's pockets, looking for means to identify him. He found nothing whatever of that sort, but from a pants pocket he drew out a fat wad of bills, and a hasty count showed that it contained $416. A situation worthy of Scribe, or even Victor Hugo! Evidently the poor fellow was one of the Russell Sages that are occasionally found among bums. His money, I suppose, had been diminishing, and he had bumped himself off in fear that it would soon be all gone. The sergeant looked at the coroner, the coroner looked at me, and I looked at the sergeant. Then the sergeant wrapped up the money in a piece of newspaper lying nearby, and handed it to the coroner. "It goes," he said sadly, "to the State of Maryland. The son-ofa-bitch died intestate, and with no heirs." The next day I met the coroner, and found him in a low frame of mind. "It was a sin and a shame," he said, "to turn that money over to the State Treasury. What I could have done with $138.67! (I noticed he made a fair split, but collared one of the two odd cents.) Well, it's gone
dissecting-room, and
I
— damn the
I
now
luck!
never did trust that
flatfoot."
Damon Runyon BUTCH MINDS THE BABY
One evening putting
along about seven o'clock
on the
comes three
gefillte fish,
which
is
I
am
a dish
Mindy's restaurant
sitting in I
am
very fond of,
when
in
from Brooklyn wearing caps as follows: Harry the Horse, Little Isadore and Spanish John. Now these parties are not such parties as I will care to have much truck with, because I often hear rumors about them that are very discreditable, even if the rumors are not true. In fact, I hear that many citizens of Brooklyn will be very glad indeed to see Harry the Horse, parties
and Spanish John move away from there, as they are always doing something that is considered a knock to the community, such as robbing people, or maybe shooting or stabbing them, and throwing pineapples, and carrying on generally. I am really much surprised to see these parties on Broadway, as it is well known that the Broadway coppers just naturally love to shove such parties around, but here they are in Mindy's, and there I am, so of course I give them a very large hello, as I never wish to seem inhospitable, even to Brooklyn parties. Right away they come over to my table and sit down, and Little Isadore reaches out and spears himself a big Little Isadore
hunk of my
gefillte fish
the only knife
Then
on the
they
that
maybe they
there looking at
me makes me
are a
little
as Mindy's, with legitimate
very polite: "It
"What
is
is
I
overlook
this, as
I
am
using
table.
all sit
the way they look at
with his fingers, but
me
without saying anything, and
very nervous indeed. Finally
embarrassed being
I
figure
in a high-class spot
people around and about, so
I
such
say to them,
a nice night."
nice about
it?"
asks Harry the Horse,
with a sharp face and sharp eyes.
who
is
a thin
man
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
20
now
Well,
that
it
is
me
put up to
nothing so nice about the night,
in this
at that, so
I
way,
try to
else jolly to say, while Little Isadore keeps spearing at
can see there is think of something I
my
gefillte fish
with
and Spanish John nabs one of my potatoes. "Where does Big Butch live?" Harry the Horse asks. "Big Butch?" I say, as if I never hear the name before in my life, because in this man's town it is never a good idea to answer any question his fingers,
some time you may give the right answer to the wrong guy, or the wrong answer to the right guy. "Where does Big Butch live?" I ask them again. without thinking
it
over, as
"Yes, where does he live?" Harr>' the Horse says, very impatient.
"We
wish you to take us to him."
"Now
wait a minute, Harry,"
than somewhat. lives in,
"I
am
not sure
and furthermore
I
am
I
say,
and
I
remember the
I
am now more
nervous
exact house Big Butch
not sure Big Butch
care to have
will
me
bringing people to see him, especially three at a time, and especially
from Brooklyn. You know Big Butch has a ver\' bad disposition, and there is no telling what he may say to me if he does not like the idea of
me
taking you to him."
"Ever\thing
be afraid of anything whatever.
means
"You need not
very kosher," Harr\- the Horse says.
is
We
have a business proposition
for Big
you take us to him at once, or the chances are I will have to put the arm on somebody around here." Well, as the only one around there for him to put the arm on at this time seems to be me, I can see where it will be good policy for me to Butch.
It
a nice score for him, so
take these parties to Big Butch, especialh- as the last of just
my is
going
down
Little Isadore's gullet,
potatoes, and
nothing more for
and Spanish John
dunking a piece of r>e bread
is
me
my
in
my
gefillte fish is
is
finishing
up
coffee, so there
to eat.
So I lead them over into West Forty-ninth Street, near Tenth Avenue, where Big Butch lives on the ground floor of an old brownstonefront house, and who is sitting out on the stoop but Big Butch himself. In fact, ever\body in the neighborhood is sitting out on the front stoops over there, including front stoops
is
women and
children, because sitting out
on the
quite a custom in this section.
Big Butch
is
peeled
down
to his undershirt
and pants, and he has
no shoes on his feet, as Big Butch is a guy who likes his comfort. Furthermore, he is smoking a cigar, and laid out on the stoop beside him on a blanket
is
a
little
baby with not
be asleep, and every
much
now and then
clothes on. This baby seems to
Big Butch fans
it
with a folded news-
paper to shoo away the mosquitoes that wish to nibble on the baby.
Damon Runyon
21
These mosquitoes come across the river from the nights and they seem to be very fond of babies. "Hello, Butch,"
I
say, as
we
Jersey side
on hot
stop in front of the stoop.
"Sh-h-h-h!" Butch says, pointing at the baby, and making
more noise with his shush than an engine blowing off steam. Then he gets up and tiptoes down to the sidewalk where we are standing, and I am hoping that Butch feels all right, because when Butch does not feel so good he is apt to be very short with one and all. He is a guy of maybe six foot two and a couple of feet wide, and he has big hairy hands and a mean look. In fact, Big Butch is known all over this man's town as a guy you must not monkey with in any respect, so it takes plenty of weight off of me when I see that he seems to know the parties from Brooklyn, and nods at them very friendly, especially at Harry the Horse. And right away Harry states a most surprising proposition to Big Butch. It seems that there is a big coal company which has an office in an old building down in West Eighteenth Street, and in this office is a safe, and in this safe is the company pay roll of twenty thousand dollars cash money. Harry the Horse knows the money is there because a personal friend of his who is the paymaster for the company puts it there late this very afternoon.
seems that the paymaster enters into a dicker with Harry the Horse and Little Isadore and Spanish John for them to slug him while It
he
is
carrying the pay
roll
from the bank
to the office in the afternoon,
but something happens that they miss connections on the exact spot, so the paymaster has to carry the sugar on to the office without being slugged, and there
Personally
it
it is
now
seems to
in
two
me
as
fat I
bundles.
listen to Harry's story that the pay-
master must be a very dishonest character to be making deals to hold while he
is
still
being slugged and the company's sugar taken away from him,
but of course
it is
none of my
business, so
I
take
no
part in the conver-
sation.
seems that Harry the Horse and
and Spanish John wish to get the money out of the safe, but none of them knows anything about opening safes, and while they are standing around over in Brooklyn talking over what is to be done in this emergency Harry suddenly remembers that Big Butch is once in the business of opening Well,
it
Little Isadore
safes for a living.
In fact,
I
hear afterwards that Big Butch
is
considered the best safe
opener east of the Mississippi River in his day, but the law finally takes to sending him to Sing Sing for opening these safes, and after he is in
and out of Sing Sing three
different times for
opening
safes
Butch
gets
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
22
what is called the Baumes Law in New York, which is a law that says if a guy is sent to Sing Sing four times hand running, he must stay there the rest of his life, without any argument about it. So Big Butch gives up opening safes for a living, and goes into business in a small way, such as running beer, and handling a little Scotch now and then, and becomes an honest citizen. Furthermore, he marries one of the neighbor's children over on the West Side by the name of Mary Murphy, and I judge the baby on this stoop comes of this marriage between Big Butch and Mary because I can see that it is a very homely baby, indeed. Still, I never see many babies that I consider rose geraniums for looks, anyway. Well, it finally comes out that the idea of Harry the Horse and Little Isadore and Spanish John is to get Big Butch to open the coal company's safe and take the payroll money out, and they are willing to give him fifty sick
and
tired of the place, especially as they pass
percent of the
money
for his bother, taking fifty percent for themselves
and paying all the overhead, such as the paymaster, out of their bit, which strikes me as a pretty fair sort of deal for Big Butch. But Butch only shakes his head. "It is old-fashioned stuff," Butch says. "Nobody opens pete boxes for a living any more. They make the boxes too good, and they are all wired up with alarms and are a lot of trouble generally. I am in a legitimate business now and going along. You boys know I cannot stand another fall, what with being away three times already, and in addition to this I must mind the baby. My old lady goes to Mrs. Clancy's wake tonight up in the Bronx, and the chances are she will be there all night, as she is very fond of wakes, so I must mind little John Ignatius Junior." "Listen, Butch," Harry the Horse says, "this is a very soft pete. It is old-fashioned, and you can open it with a toothpick. There are no wires on it, because they never put more than a dime in it before in years. It just happens they have to put the twenty G's in it tonight because my pal the paymaster makes it a point not to get back from the jug with the scratch in time to pay off today, especially after he sees we miss out on him. It is the softest touch you will ever know, and where can a guy pick up ten G's like this?" I can see that Big Butch is thinking the ten G's over very seriously, at that, because in these times nobody can afford to pass up ten G's, especially a guy in the beer business, which is very, very tough just now. But finally he shakes his head again and says like this: "No," he says, "I must let it go, because I must mind the baby. My old lady is very, very particular about this, and I dast not leave little John for finding the plant,
Damon Runyon Ignatius Junior for a minute. If
23
Mary comes home and
finds
I
am
not
minding the baby she will put the blast on me plenty. I like to turn a few honest bobs now and then as well as anybody, but," Butch says, "John Ignatius Junior comes first with me." Then he turns away and goes back to the stoop as much as to say he is through arguing, and sits down beside John Ignatius Junior again just in time to keep a mosquito from carrying off one of John's legs. Anybody can see that Big Butch is very fond of this baby, though personally I will not give you a dime a dozen for babies, male and female. Well, Harry the Horse and Little Isadore and Spanish John are very much disappointed, and stand around talking among themselves, and paying no attention to me, when all of a sudden Spanish John, who never has
much
to say
up
to this time,
seems
to
have a bright
idea.
He
Harry and Isadore, and they get all pleasured up over what he say, and finally Harry goes to Big Butch.
talks to
has to
"Sh-h-h-h!" Big Butch says, pointing to the baby as Harry opens his
mouth. "Listen, Butch," Harry says in a whisper,
with us, and you can mind
it
"we can take the baby
and work, too."
"Why," Big Butch whispers back, "this is quite an idea indeed. Let us go into the house and talk things over." So he picks up the baby and leads us into his joint, and gets out some pretty fair beer, though it is needled a little, at that, and we sit around the kitchen chewing the fat in whispers. There is a crib in the kitchen, and Butch puts the baby in his crib, and it keeps on snoozing away first rate while we are talking. In fact, it is sleeping so sound that I am commencing to figure that Butch must give it some of the needled beer he is feeding us, because I am feeling a little dopey myself. Finally Butch says that as long as he can take John Ignatius Junior with him he sees no reason why he shall not go and open the safe for them, only he says he must have five percent more to put in the baby's bank when he gets back, so as to round himself up with his ever-loving wife in case of a beef from her over keeping the baby out in the night air.
Harry the Horse says he considers
strong, but Spanish John, after all
it is
only
fair to
who seems
this extra five
percent a
little
to be a very square guy, says that
cut the baby in
if it is
to be with
them when they
making the score, and Little Isadore seems to think this is all right, too. So Harry the Horse gives in, and says five percent it is. Well, as they do not wish to start out until after midnight, and as there is plenty of time. Big Butch gets out some more needled beer, and then he goes looking for the tools with which he opens safes, and which are
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
24
he says he does not see since the day John Ignatius Junior is born, and he gets them out to build the crib. Now this is a good time for me to bid one and all farewell, and what keeps me there is something I cannot tell you to this day, because personally
I
never before have any idea of taking part in a safe opening,
especially with a baby, as
When I come
consider such actions very dishonorable.
to think things over afterwards, the only thing
the needled beer, but
is
I
I
wish to say
I
am
really very
much
I
can figure
surprised at
one o'clock in the morning with these Brooklyn parties and Big Butch and the baby. Butch has John Ignatius Junior rolled up in a blanket, and John is still pounding his ear. Butch has a satchel of tools, and what looks to me like a big flat book, and just before we leave the house Butch hands me myself
a
when
I
package and
find myself in a taxicab along about
tells
me
to
be very careful with
it.
He
gives Little Isadore
which Isadore shoves into his pistol pocket, and when Isadore sits down in the taxi something goes wa-wa, like a sheep, and Big Butch becomes very indignant because it seems Isadore is sitting on John Ignatius Junior's doll, which says "Mamma" when you squeeze it. a smaller package,
John Ignatius Junior may wish something to play with in case he wakes up, and it is a good thing for Little Isadore that the mamma doll is not squashed so it cannot say "Mamma" any more, or the chances are Little Isadore will get a good It
seems Big Butch
figures that
bust in the snoot.
We let the taxicab go in
West Eighteenth
walk the
rest of the
package, and Butch
Street,
away from the spot we are headed for between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, and
a block
way two by is
two.
I
walk with Big Butch, carrying
lugging the baby and his satchel and the
down
flat
my
thing
West Eighteenth Street at such an hour that you can hear yourself think, and in fact I hear myself thinking very plain that I am a big sap to be on a job like this, especially with a baby, but I keep going just the same, which shows you what a that looks like a book.
very big sap
I
It is
so quiet
in
am, indeed.
There are very few people in West Eighteenth Street when we get there, and one of them is a fat guy who is leaning against a building almost in the center of the block, and who takes a walk for himself as soon as he sees us. It seems that this fat guy is the watchman at the coal company's office and is also a personal friend of Harry the Horse, which is why he takes the walk when he sees us coming. It is agreed before we leave Big Butch's house that Harry the Horse and Spanish John are to stay outside the place as lookouts, while Big Butch is inside opening the safe, and that Little Isadore is to go with
Damon Runyon Butch. Nothing whatever
any time, and
outsider, but, as
me
to
can see
I
Butch
25
by anybody about where I am to be at no matter where I am, I will still be an
said
is
that,
gives
me
the package to carry,
I
figure
he wishes
remain with him.
no bother at all getting into the office of the coal company, which is on the ground floor, because it seems the watchman leaves the front door open, this watchman being a most obliging guy, indeed. In fact he is so obliging that by and by he comes back and lets Harry the Horse and Spanish John tie him up good and tight, and stick a handkerchief in his mouth and chuck him in an areaway next to the office, so nobody will think he has anything to do with opening the safe in case anybody comes around asking. The office looks out on the street, and the safe that Harry the Horse and Little Isadore and Spanish John wish Big Butch to open is standing up against the rear wall of the office facing the street windows. There is one little electric light burning very dim over the safe so that when anybody walks past the place outside, such as a watchman, they can look in through the window and see the safe at all times, unless they are blind. It is
It is
not a
when he
tall safe,
sees
it,
so
and I
it is
not a big safe, and
figure this safe
is
not
I
can see Big Butch grin
much
of a safe, just as Harry
the Horse claims. Well, as soon as Big Butch and the baby and Little Isadore and
me
Butch steps over to the safe and unfolds what I think is the big flat book, and what is it but a sort of screen painted on one side to look exactly like the front of a safe. Big Butch stands this screen up on the floor in front of the real safe, leaving plenty of space in between, the idea being that the screen will keep anyone passing in the street outside from seeing Butch while he is opening the safe, because when a man is opening a safe he needs all the privacy he can get. Big Butch lays John Ignatius Junior down on the floor on the blanket behind the phony safe front and takes his tools out of the satchel and starts to work opening the safe, while Little Isadore and me get back in a corner where it is dark, because there is not room for all of us back of the screen. However, we can see what Big Butch is doing, and I wish to say while I never before see a professional safe opener at work, and never wish to see another, this Butch handles himself like a real artist. He starts drilling into the safe around the combination lock, working very fast and very quiet, when all of a sudden what happens but John Ignatius Junior sits up on the blanket and lets out a squall. Naturally this is most disquieting to me, and personally I am in favor of beaning John Ignatius Junior with something to make him keep still, because I am get into the office. Big
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
26
nervous enough as
He
it is.
down
But the squalHng does not seem
to bother Big
and picks up John Ignatius Junior and whispering, "There, there, there, my itty oddleums. Da-dad is
Butch. starts
lays
his tools
here."
Well, this sounds very nonsensical to
me
in
such a situation, and
it
makes no impression whatever on John Ignatius Junior. He keeps on squalling, and I judge he is squalling pretty loud because I see Harry the Horse and Spanish John both walk past the window and look in very anxious. Big Butch jiggles John Ignatius Junior up and down and keeps whispering baby talk to him, which sounds very undignified coming from a high-class safe opener, and finally Butch whispers to me to hand him the package
I
am
He opens full
carrying.
the package, and what
of milk. Moreover, there
is
a
is
little tin
in
it
but a baby's nursing bottle
stew pan, and Butch hands the
and whispers to me to find a water tap somewhere in the joint fill the pan with water. So I go stumbling around in the dark in a room behind the office and bark my shins several times before I find a tap and fill the pan. I take it back to Big Butch, and he squats there with the baby on one arm, and gets a tin of what is called canned heat out of the package, and lights this canned heat with his cigar lighter, and starts heating the pan of water with the nursing bottle in it. Big Butch keeps sticking his finger in the pan of water while it is heating, and by and by he puts the rubber nipple of the nursing bottle in his mouth and takes a pull at it to see if the milk is warm enough, just like I see dolls who have babies do. Apparently the milk is okay, as Butch hands the bottle to John Ignatius Junior, who grabs hold of it with both hands and starts sucking on the business end. Naturally he has to stop squalling, and Big Butch goes to work on the safe again, with John Ignatius Junior sitting on the blanket, pulling on the bottle and looking
pan and
to
me
wiser than a treeful of owls.
anybody figures, or Big Butch's tools are not so good, what with being old and rusty and used for building baby cribs, because he breaks a couple of drills and works himself up into quite a sweat without getting anywhere. Butch afterwards explains to me that he is one of the first guys in this country to open safes without explosives, but he says to do this work properly you have to know the safes so as to drill to the tumblers of the lock just right, and it seems that this particular safe is a new type to him, even if it is old, and he is out of practice. Well, in the meantime John Ignatius Junior finishes his bottle and starts mumbling again, and Big Butch gives him a tool to play with, and It
seems the
safe
is
either a tougher job than
Damon Runyon
27
Butch needs this tool and tries to take it away from John Ignatius Junior, and the baby lets out such a squawk that Butch has to let him keep it until he can sneak it away from him, and this causes more delay. Finally Big Butch gives up trying to drill the safe open, and he whispers to us that he will have to put a little shot in it to loosen up the lock, which is all right with us, because we are getting tired of hanging around and listening to John Ignatius Junior's glug-glugging. As far as I finally
am
personally concerned,
I
am
wishing
I
am home
in bed.
Well, Butch starts pawing through his satchel looking for something
seems that what he is looking for is a little bottle of some kind of explosive with which to shake the lock on the safe up some, and at first
and
it
he cannot
find this bottle, but finally
Junior has
it
and
gnawing
is
at
he discovers that John Ignatius the cork, and Butch has quite a battle
making John Ignatius Junior give it up. Anyway, he fixes the explosive in one of the holes he drills near the combination lock on the safe, and then he puts in a fuse, and just before he touches off the fuse Butch picks up John Ignatius Junior and hands him to Little Isadore, and tells us to go into the room behind the office. John Ignatius Junior does not seem to care for Little Isadore, and I do not blame him, at that, because he starts to squirm around quite some in Isadore's arms and lets out a squall, but all of a sudden he becomes very quiet indeed, and, while
me
I
am
not able to prove
it,
something
tells
hand over John Ignatius Junior's mouth. us right away in the back room, and sound Junior again as Butch takes him from Little
that Little Isadore has his
Well, Big Butch joins
comes out of John Ignatius Isadore, and I am thinking that it is a good thing for Isadore that the baby cannot tell Big Butch what Isadore does to him. "I put in just a little bit of a shot," Big Butch says, "and it will not make any more noise than snapping your fingers." But a second later there is a big whoom from the office, and the whole joint shakes, and John Ignatius Junior laughs right out loud. The chances are he thinks it is the Fourth of July. "I
guess
maybe
he rushes into the Ignatius Junior
the safe
is
I
put in too big a charge," Big Butch says, and then
office with Little Isadore
still
and
me
after
him, and John
laughing very heartily for a small baby.
The door
of
swinging loose, and the whole joint looks somewhat wrecked,
but Big Butch loses no time in getting his dukes into the safe and grabbing out two big bundles of cash money, which he
sticks inside his shirt.
As we go into the street Harry the Horse and Spanish John come running up much excited, and Harry says to Big Butch like this:
"What
are
you
trying to do,"
he
says,
"wake up the whole town?"
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
28
maybe
"Well," Butch says, "I guess
the charge
is
too strong, at that,
but nobody seems to be coming, so you and Spanish John walk over to
Eighth Avenue, and the along quiet,
like
rest
of us
will
people minding their
walk to Seventh, and
own
business,
it
will
be
if
all
you go right."
John Ignatius Junior's company by this time, because he says he will go with Harry the Horse and Spanish John, and this leaves Big Butch and John Ignatius Junior and me to go
But
I
judge Little Isadore
the other way. So
we
start
is
tired of
moving, and
all
of a sudden two cops
come
which Harry and Isadore and Spanish John are going. The chances are the cops hear the earthquake Big Butch lets off and are coming to investigate. But the chances are, too, that if Harry the Horse and the other two keep on walking along very quietly like Butch tells them to, the coppers will pass them up entirely, because it is not likely that coppers will figure anybody to be opening safes with explosives in this neighborhood. But the minute Harry the Horse sees the coppers he loses his nut, and he outs with the old equalizer and starts blasting away, and what does Spanish John do but get his out, too, and open up. The next thing anybody knows, the two coppers are down on the ground with slugs in them, but other coppers are coming from every which direction, blowing whistles and doing a little blasting themselves, and there is plenty of excitement, especially when the coppers who are not chasing Harry the Horse and Little Isadore and Spanish John start poking around the neighborhood and find Harry's pal, the watchman, all tied up nice and tight where Harry leaves him, and the watchman explains that some scoundrels blow open the safe he is watching. All this time Big Butch and me are walking in the other direction toward Seventh Avenue, and Big Butch has John Ignatius in his arms, and John Ignatius is now squalling very loud, indeed. The chances are he is still thinking of the big whoom back there which tickles him so and is wishing to hear some more whooms. Anyway, he is beating his own best record for squalling, and as we go walking along Big Butch says to tearing around the corner toward
me
like this:
"I dast
not run," he says, "because
if
any coppers see
me
running
me
and maybe hit John Ignatius Junior, and besides running will joggle the milk up in him and make him sick. My old lady always warns me never to joggle John Ignatius Junior when he they
is
will start
full
popping
of milk." "Well, Butch,"
am at
at
joggled up, so
if
the next corner."
I
say, "there
is
no milk
you do not mind,
I
in
me, and
will start
doing a
do not care if I piece of running I
Damon Runyon
29
But just then around the corner of Seventh Avenue toward which we are headed comes two or three coppers with a big fat sergeant with them, and one of the coppers, who is half out of breath as if he has been doing plenty of sprinting, blows a safe
down
somebody
explaining to the sergeant that
is
the street and shoots a couple of coppers in the get-
away.
And
there
is
Big Butch, with John Ignatius Junior in his arms and
twenty G's in his shirt front and a tough record behind him, walking
up
right
I
to
am
them. feeling very sorry, indeed, for Big Butch,
myself, too, and
I
am
remember thinking and
I
who
I
that
I
am
as long as
I I
will
for
never
live.
can
I
getting a better break than Butch, at that,
remember wondering what they
will give
life, like
him,
John Ignatius Junior,
tearing off these squalls, with Big Butch saying: "There, there,
is still
there. Daddy's itty
Well,
I
woogleums." Then
"We
the fat sergeant:
me,
get out of this
not have to go to Sing Sing for the rest of my
will
also
if I
anyone but ministers of the gospel
associate with
because
saying to myself that
and very sorry
can see
hear one of the coppers say to
better nail these guys. it is
fat
They may be
in
on
this."
good-by to Butch and John Ignatius Junior and
as the fat sergeant steps
arm on Butch, the
I
up
to Big Butch, but instead of putting the
sergeant only points at John Ignatius Junior and
asks very sympathetic: "Teeth?"
"No," Big Butch says. "Not teeth. Colic. I just get the doctor here out of bed to do something for him, and we are going to a drug store to get
some medicine." Well, naturally
am
I
am
very
much
not a doctor, and
surprised at this statement, because
John Ignatius Junior has colic it serves him right, but I am only hoping they do not ask for my degree, when the fat sergeant says: "Too bad. I know what it is. I got three of them at of course
I
home. But," he
Then
says, "it acts
as Big
our business
I
more
like
it is
teeth than colic."
Butch and John Ignatius Junior and
hear the
"Yea, of course a guy
make
if
is
fat
me
go on about
sergeant say to the copper, very sarcastic:
out blowing safes with a baby in his arms!
You
you will!" I do not see Big Butch for several days after I learn that Harry the Horse and Little Isadore and Spanish John get back to Brooklyn all right, except they are a little nicked up here and there from the slugs the coppers toss at them, while the coppers they clip are not damaged so very much. Furthermore, the chances are I will not see Big Butch for several years, if it is left to me, but he comes looking for me one night,
will
a great detective,
and he seems
to
be
all
pleasured up about something.
^O
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
copper credit "Say," Big Butch says to me, "you know I never give a I wish to say that this fat for knowing any too much about anything, but smart duck. He is sergeant we run into the other night is a very, very Ignatius Junior, for what right about it being teeth that is ailing John happens yesterday but John cuts in his first tooth."
p.
G. Wodehouse
UKRIDGE'S ACCIDENT SYNDICATE
"Haifa minute, laddie,"
me to a halt on
said Ukridge.
the outskirts of the
And, gripping
little
my
arm, he brought
crowd which had collected about
the church door.
was a crowd such as may be seen any morning during the London mating-season outside any of the churches which nestle in the quiet squares between Hyde Park and the King's Road, Chelsea. It
It
consisted of five
women
of cooklike aspect, four nursemaids, half
dozen men of the non-producing class who had torn themselves away for the moment from their normal task of propping up the wall of the Bunch of Grapes public-house on the corner, a costermonger with a barrow of vegetables, divers small boys, eleven dogs, and two or three purposeful-looking young fellows with cameras slung over their shouland, arguing from the ders. It was plain that a wedding was in progress presence of the cameramen and the line of smart motor-cars along the was why kerb, a fairly fashionable wedding. What was not plain to me Ukridge, sternest of bachelors, had desired to add himself to the spectaa
—
—
—
tors.
"What," I enquired, "is the thought behind this? Why are we interrupting our walk to attend the obsequies of some perfect stranger?" Ukridge did not reply for a moment. He seemed plunged in a dreadful sound thought. Then he uttered a hollow, mirthless laugh
—
like
the
last
gargle of a dying moose.
"Perfect stranger,
my number
"Do you know who "Who?"
coarse way.
it is
eleven foot!" he responded, in a
who's getting hitched up in there?"
"Teddy Weeks." "Teddy Weeks? Teddy Weeks? Good Lord!" really?"
I
exclaimed. "Not
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
32
And
five years rolled
was
It
away.
Beak Street that Ukridge favourite resort of our little
at Barolini's Italian restaurant in
evolved his great scheme. Barolini's was a
group of earnest strugglers
Soho used
in the days
when
the philanthropic restaura-
and coffee
for a shilling
and
sixpence; and there were present that night, besides Ukridge and
my-
teurs of
self,
to supply four courses
Teddy Weeks, the actor, fresh from tour with the Number Three "Only a Shop-Girl" Com-
the following men-about-town:
a six-weeks'
pany; Victor Beamish, the
artist,
the
man who drew
that picture of
the O-So-Eesi Piano-Player in the advertisement pages of the Piccadilly
Magazine; Bertram Fox, author of Ashes of Remorse, and other unproduced motion-picture scenarios; and Robert Dunhill, who, being
employed
at a salary
of eighty pounds per
annum
by the
New
Asiatic
Bank, represented the sober, hard-headed commercial element. As
Teddy Weeks had
usual,
collared the conversation,
and was
telling us
once again how good he was and how hardly treated by a malignant fate.
There is no need to describe Teddy Weeks. Under another and a more euphonious name he has long since made his personal appearance dreadfully familiar to all who read the illustrated weekly papers. He was then, as now, a sickeningly handsome young man, possessing precisely the same melting eyes, mobile mouth, and corrugated hair so esteemed by the theatre-going public today. And yet, at this period of his career he was wasting himself on minor touring companies of the kind which open at Barrow-in-Furness and jump to Bootle for the second half of the week. He attributed this, as Ukridge was so apt to attribute his own difficulties, to lack of capital. "I
have everything," he
said, querulously,
emphasizing
his
remarks
with a coffee spoon. "Looks, talent, personality, a beautiful speaking voice
— everything.
have no clothes
fit
All
I
need
to wear.
is
a chance.
And
These managers are
I
can't get that because all
the same, they never
look below the surface, they never bother to find out All they
go by are his clothes.
If I
I
if
a
man
has genius.
could afford to buy a couple of
suits
Cork Street tailor, if I could have my boots made to order by Moykoff instead of getting them ready-made and second-hand at Moses Brothers', if I could once contrive to own a decent hat, a really good pair of spats, and a gold cigarette-case, all at the same time, I could walk into any manager's office in London and sign up for a West End production from
a
tomorrow."
was at this point that Freddie Lunt came in. Freddie, like Robert Dunhill, was a financial magnate in the making and an assiduous freIt
p.
quenter of
and
Barolini's;
time had passed since
it
G. Wodehouse
33
suddenly occurred to us that a considerable
we had
last
seen him in the place.
We
enquired
the reason for this aloofness.
been
"I've
in bed," said Freddie, "for over a fortnight."
The statement incurred Ukridge's stern disapproval. That great man made a practice of never rising before noon, and on one occasion, when a carelessly-thrown match had burned a hole in his only pair of had gone so far as to remain between the sheets for forty-eight hours, but sloth on so majestic a scale as this shocked him. "Lazy young devil," he commented severely. "Letting the golden hours of youth slip by like that when you ought to have been bustling about and making a name for yourself." Freddie protested himself wronged by the imputation. "I had an accident," he explained. "Fell off my bicycle and sprained trousers,
my
ankle."
"Tough "Oh,
And
I
luck," was our verdict.
don't know," said Freddie. "It wasn't bad fun getting a
rest.
of course there was the fiver."
"What
fiver?"
got a fiver from the Weekly Cyclist for getting
"I
my
ankle
sprained."
"You tale
what?" cried Ukridge, profoundly
of easy money.
"Do you mean
dashed paper paid you
five
to
sit
stirred
there and
—
tell
as ever
me
— by
that
a
some
quid simply because you sprained your ankle?
Pull yourself together, old horse. Things like that don't happen." "It's
quite true."
"Can you show me the "No; because
if I
Ukridge ignored
did
fiver?"
you would
try to
borrow
it."
this slur in dignified silence.
"Would they pay a fiver to anyone who sprained asked, sticking to the main point.
his ankle?"
he
"Yes. If he was a subscriber." "I
knew
there was a catch in
it,"
said Ukridge, moodily.
"Lots of weekly papers are starting this wheeze," proceeded Freddie.
"You pay
a year's subscription
and that
entitles
you
to accident
insurance."
We
were interested. This was in the days before every daily paper in London was competing madly against its rivals in the matter of insurance and offering princely bribes to the citizens to make a fortune by breaking their necks. Nowadays papers are paying as high as two thou-
sand pounds for a genuine corpse and
five
pounds a week
for a
mere
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
34
new and
dislocated spine; but at that time the idea was
had an
it
attractive
appeal.
"How many
of these rags are doing this?" asked Ukridge.
You
could
from the gleam in his eyes that that great brain was whirring like a dynamo. "As many as ten?" "Yes, I should think so. Quite ten." "Then a fellow who subscribed to them all and then sprained his tell
ankle would get
"More "They have broken
leg,
if
fifty
quid?" said Ukridge, reasoning acutely.
the injury was
a regular
and so
tariff.
more
So much
as
for a
broken arm, so
much
for a
forth."
Ukridge's collar leaped off
drunkenly
serious," said Freddie, the expert.
he turned
stud and his pince-nez wobbled
its
to us.
"How much money can you "What do you want
it
blokes raise?" he demanded.
for?" asked
Robert Dunhill, with a banker's
caution.
"My
dear old horse, can't you see?
of the century.
Upon my Sam,
this
is
Why, my
gosh, I've got the idea
scheme
the giltest-edged
money and
ever hatched. We'll get together enough
that
was
take out a year's
subscription for every one of these dashed papers."
"What's the good of that?" said Dunhill, coldly unenthusiastic.
They
train
bank
to refuse overdrafts
clerks to
when
stifle
they
emotions, so that they
will
become managers. "The odds
should none of us have an accident of any kind, and then the
be able
we money
are
would be chucked away."
"Good heavens, ass," snorted Ukridge, "you don't suppose I'm suggesting that we should leave it to chance, do you? Listen! Here's the scheme. We take out subscriptions for all these papers, then we draw and the fellow who gets the fatal card or whatever it is goes out and breaks his leg and draws the loot, and we split up between us and live on it in luxury. It ought to run into hundreds of pounds." A long silence followed. Then Dunhill spoke again. His was a solid lots,
rather than a nimble mind.
"Suppose he couldn't break
"My
his leg?"
gosh!" cried Ukridge, exasperated. "Here
tieth century, with every resource of
modern
we
are in the twen-
civilization at
our disposal,
with opportunities for getting our legs broken opening about us on every side leg.
— and you ask Any
ass
a silly question like that!
can break a
leg. It's a little
Of course he could
hard! We're
— personally, unless Freddie can lend me
all
infernally broke
a bit of that fiver
I'm going to have a difficult job pulling through.
We all
break his
till
Saturday,
need money
like
p.
when
the dickens, and yet,
I
G. Wodehouse
point out this marvellous
lecting a bit, instead of fawning
and make objections. "If you're as
gazed to
at
for col-
ready intelligence you
spirit. It isn't
the
spirit that
sit
wins."
hard up as that," objected Dunhill, "how are you going
came
his
if
He
into Ukridge's eyes.
Dunhill through a lopsided pince-nez as one
"Me?" he
damme,
my
for
pained, almost a stunned, look
whether
who
speculates as
hearing has deceived him.
"Me?
cried.
any
there's
and good feeling
me
me
scheme
your share of the pool?"
to put in
A
on
the right
It isn't
35
I
like that!
Upon my Sam,
justice in the world,
your bally bosoms,
in
in free for suggesting the idea.
It's
I
a
that's rich!
Why,
decency should think you would let there's a spark of
if
little
hard!
I
supply the brains
cough up cash as well. My gosh, I didn't expect this. This hurts me, by George! If anybody had told me that an old pal would "Oh, all right," said Robert Dunhill. "All right, all right, all right. But I'll tell you one thing. If you draw the lot it'll be the happiest day of and you want
me
to
—
my life." "I shan't," said
Nor
Ukridge. "Something
When,
tells
me that
I
shan't."
solemn silence broken only by the sound of a distant waiter quarrelling with the cook down a speaking-tube, we had completed the drawing, the man of destiny was Teddy Weeks. I suppose that even in the springtime of Youth, when broken limbs seem a lighter matter than they become later in life, it can never be an unmixedly agreeable thing to have to go out into the public highways and try to make an accident happen to one. In such circumstances the reflection that you are thereby benefiting your friends can bring but slight balm. To Teddy Weeks it appeared to bring no balm at all. That he was experiencing a certain disinclination to sacrifice himself for the public good became more and more evident as the days went by and found him still intact. Ukridge, when he called upon me to discuss the matter, was visibly perturbed. He sank mto a chair beside the table at which I was beginning my modest morning meal, and, having drunk half
my
did he.
in a
coffee, sighed deeply.
"Upon my Sam," he moaned, brain to think
up schemes
moment when we
are
all
"it's
a
for getting us
needing
it
little all
most,
disheartening.
lets
me down
laddie, that
now
my
money just at the and when I hit on what is
drawn the
lot.
And
this blighter
my
luck
the worst of
it is,
by shirking his plain duty.
that a fellow like that should have
strain
a bit of
probably the simplest and yet ripest notion of our time,
Weeks goes and
I
It's
just
we've started with him, we've got to keep on.
We
can't
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
36
enough money
possibly raise It's
Weeks "I
to
pay yearly subscriptions for anybody
else.
or nobody."
suppose we must give him time."
"That's what he says," grunted Ukridge, morosely, helping himself
he doesn't know how to start about it. To listen to him, you'd think that going and having a trifling accident was the sort of delicate and intricate job that required years of study and special preparation. Why, a child of six could do it on his head at five minutes' notice. to toast.
"He
The man's
says
You make
so infernally particular.
instead of accepting
them
in a broad,
helpful suggestions, and
reasonable
spirit
of cooperation he
you every time with some frivolous objection. He's so dashed fastidious. When we were out last night, we came on a couple of navvies scrapping. Good hefty fellows, either of them capable of putting him in hospital for a month. I told him to jump in and start separating them, and he said no; it was a private dispute which was none of his business, and he didn't feel justified in interfering. Finicky, I call it. I tell you, laddie, this blighter is a broken reed. He has got cold feet. We did wrong to let him into the drawing at all. We might have known that a fellow like that would never give results. No conscience. No sense of esprit de corps. No notion of putting himself out to the most trifling extent for the benefit of the community. Haven't you any more marma-
comes back
at
lade, laddie?" "I
have not."
"Then pausing
at
I'll
be going," said Ukridge, moodily.
the door, "you couldn't lend
"How
me
five
"I
suppose," he added,
bob?"
you guess?" "Then I'll tell you what," said Ukridge, ever fair and reasonable; "you can stand me dinner tonight. He seemed cheered up for the moment by this happy compromise, but gloom descended on him again. His face clouded. "When I think," he said, "of all the money that's locked up in that poor faint-hearted fish, just waiting to be released, I could sob. he has a bad eye Sob, laddie, like a little child. I never liked that man and waves his hair. Never trust a man who waves his hair, old horse." Ukridge s pessimism was not confined to himself. By the end of a fortnight, nothing having happened to Teddy Weeks worse than a slight cold which he shook off in a couple of days, the general consensus of opinion among his apprehensive colleagues in the Syndicate was that the situation had become desperate. There were no signs whatever of any return on the vast capital which was laid out, and meanwhile meals had to be bought, landladies paid, and a reasonable supply of tobacco acquired. It was a melancholy task in these circumstances to read one's did
"
—
paper of a morning.
p.
G. Wodehouse
37
All over the inhabited globe, so the well-informed sheet gave
one
was happening every day to practically everybody in existence except Teddy Weeks. Farmers in Minnesota were getting mixed up with reaping-machines; peasants in India to understand, every kind of accident
were being bisected by crocodiles; iron girders from skyscrapers were falling hourly on the heads of citizens in every town from Philadelphia
San Francisco; and the only people who were not down with ptomaine poisoning were those who had walked over cliffs, driven motors into walls, tripped over manholes, or assumed on too slight evidence that the gun was not loaded. In a crippled world, it seemed, Teddy Weeks walked alone, whole and glowing with health. It was one of those grim, ironical, hopeless, grey, despairful situations which the Russian novelists love to write about, and I could not find it in me to blame Ukridge for taking direct action in this crisis. My only regret was that bad luck caused so to
excellent a plan to miscarry.
My
first
intimation that he had been trying to hurry matters
came when he and
on
were walking along the King's Road one evening, and he drew me into Markham Square, a dismal backwater where he had once had rooms. I
"What's the idea?"
"Teddy Weeks
put
I
lives
I
disliked the place.
here," said Ukridge. "In
my old
rooms.
"
I
could
any fascination to the place. Every day and in every was feeling sorrier and sorrier that I had been foolish enough to
not see that
way
asked, for
I
this lent
money which
I
could
ill
earmarks of a wash-out, and
spare into a venture which had
my
all
the
sentiments towards Teddy Weeks were
cold and hostile. "I
want
to enquire after
"Enquire
after
"Well, the fact
him."
him? Why?" is,
laddie,
have an idea that he has been bitten by
I
a dog."
"What makes you think "Oh,
I
that?"
don't know," said Ukridge, dreamily. "I've just got the idea.
You know how one gets ideas." The mere contemplation
me
of this beautiful event was so inspiring
which we had invested dog-bites were specifically recommended as things which every subscriber ought to have. They came about half-way up the list of that for a while
it
held
silent.
In each of the ten journals in
lucrative accidents, inferior to a broken rib or a fractured fibula, but
better value than
an ingrowing
toenail.
I
was gloating happily over the
up by Ukridge's words when an exclamation brought me back with a start to the realities of life. A revolting sight met my eyes. Down the street came ambling the familiar figure of Teddy Weeks, and picture conjured
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
38
one glance at his elegant person was enough to tell us that our hopes had been built on sand. Not even a toy Pomeranian had chewed this man. "Hallo, you fellows!" said Teddy Weeks.
we responded, dully. "Can't stop," said Teddy Weeks. "A doctor?" "Hallo!"
"I've got to fetch a doctor."
"Yes. Poor Victor Beamish. He's been bitten by a dog."
exchanged wean- glances. It seemed as if Fate was going out of its way to have sport with us. What was the good of a dog biting Victor Beamish? What was the good of a hundred dogs biting Victor Beamish? A dog-bitten Victor Beamish had no market value whatUkridge and
I
ever.
"You know that fierce brute that belongs to my landlady," said Teddy Weeks. "The one that always dashes out into the area and barks at people who come to the front door." I remembered. A large mongrel with wild eyes and flashing fangs, badly in need of a haircut.
encountered
it
once
in the street,
when
visiting Ukridge,
I
had
and only the dogs were as
who knew it well and to whom all brothers, had saved me from the doom of Victor Beamish. "Somehow or other he got into my bedroom this evening. He was waiting there when presence of the
came home. pinned him by
latter,
had brought Beamish back with me, and the animal the leg the moment I opened the door." "Why didn't he pin you?" asked Ukridge, aggrieved. "What I can't make out," said Teddy Weeks, "is how on earth the brute came to be in my room. Somebody must have put him there. The whole thing is ver\- mysterious." "Why didn't he pin you?" demanded Ukridge again. "Oh, I managed to climb on to the top of the wardrobe while he was biting Beamish," said Teddy Weeks. "And then the landlady came and took him away. But I can't stop here talking. I must go and get that I
I
doctor."
We
gazed after him in silence
as
he tripped down the
noted the careful manner in which he paused traffic
at the
street.
We
corner to eye the
before crossing the road, the wary way in which he drew back to
allow a truck to rattle past.
"You heard
that?" said Ukridge, tensely.
"He climbed on
of the wardrobe!"
"Yes."
"And you saw the way he dodged "Yes."
that excellent truck?"
to the top
p.
G. Wodehouse
39
"Something's got to be done," said Ukridge, firmly. "The
man
has
awakened to a sense of his responsibihties." Next day a deputation waited on Teddy Weeks. Ukridge was our spokesman, and he came to the point with admi-
got to be
rable directness.
"How "How
about
it?"
asked Ukridge.
about what?" replied Teddy Weeks, nervously, avoiding
his
accusing eye.
"When do we get action?" "Oh, you mean that accident
business?"
"Yes."
been thinking about that," said Teddy Weeks. Ukridge drew the mackintosh which he wore indoors and out of doors and in all weathers more closely around him. There was in the action something suggestive of a member of the Roman Senate about to denounce an enemy of the State. In just such a manner must Cicero have swished his toga as he took a deep breath preparatory to assailing Clodius. He toyed for a moment with the ginger-beer wire which held his pince-nez in place, and endeavoured without success to button his collar at the back. In moments of emotion Ukridge's collar always took on a sort of temperamental jumpiness which no stud could restrain. "And about time you were thinking about it," he boomed, sternly. We shifted appreciatively in our seats, all except Victor Beamish, who had declined a chair and was standing by the mantelpiece. "Upon my Sam, it's about time you were thinking about it. Do you realize that we've invested an enormous sum of money in you on the distinct understanding that we could rely on you to do your duty and get immediate results? Are we to be forced to the conclusion that you are so yellow and few in the pod as to want to evade your honourable obligations? We thought better of you. Weeks. Upon my Sam, we thought better of you. We took you for a two-fisted, enterprising, big-souled, one hundred-percent he-man who would stand by his friends to the finish." "I've
"Yes,
but—"
"Any bloke with a sense of loyalty and an appreciation of what it meant to the rest of us would have rushed out and found some means of fulfilling his
that
duty long ago.
come your it's
don't even grasp at the opportunities
way. Only yesterday
step into the road
"Well,
You
would have had
not easy to
"Nonsense.
It
let a
I
saw you draw back when a single
a truck
truck
only requires a
bumping
bump
little
into you."
into you."
ordinary resolution. Use your
imagination, man. Try to think that a child has fallen
down
in the street
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
40
—
a
little
golden-haired child," said Ukridge, deeply affected. "And a
dashed great cab or something comes rolling up. The kid's mother is standing on the pavement, helpless, her hands clasped in agony. 'Dam-
no one save my darling?' 'Yes, by George,' you shout, 7 will.' And out you jump and the thing's over in half a second. I don't know what you're making such a fuss about." "Yes, but " said Teddy Weeks. mit,' she cries, 'will
—
"I'm told what's more,
it
isn't a bit painful.
A
sort of dull shock,
that's all."
"Who
you that?" "I forget. Someone." "Well, you can tell him from me that he's an ass," said Teddy Weeks, with asperity. "All right. If you object to being run over by a truck there are lots of other ways. But, upon my Sam, it's pretty hopeless suggesting them. You seem to have no enterprise at all. Yesterday, after I went to all the trouble to put a dog in your room, a dog which would have done all the work for him all you had to do was stand still and let him use his own judgement what happened? You climbed on to Victor Beamish interrupted, speaking in a voice husky with emotold
—
—
—
tion.
you who put that damned dog in the room?" "Eh?" said Ukridge. "Why, yes. But we can have a good talk about all that later on," he proceeded, hastily. "The point at the moment is how the dickens we're going to persuade this poor worm to collect our insurance money for us. Why, damme, I should have thought you would have "All I can say " began Victor Beamish, heatedly. "Yes, yes," said Ukridge; "some other time. Must stick to business now, laddie. I was saying," he resumed, "that I should have thought you would have been as keen as mustard to put the job through for your own sake. You're always beefing that you haven't any clothes to impress managers with. Think of all you can buy with your share of the swag once you have summoned up a little ordinary determination and seen the thing through. Think of the suits, the boots, the hats, the spats. You're always talking about your dashed career, and how all you need to land you in a West End production is good clothes. Well, here's your chance to get them." His eloquence was not wasted. A wistful look came into Teddy Weeks 's eye, such a look as must have come into the eye of Moses on the summit of Pisgah. He breathed heavily! You could see that the man
"Was
—
it
—
p.
G. Wodehouse
41
was mentally walking along Cork Street, weighing the merits of one famous tailor against another. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he said, suddenly. "It's no use asking me to put this thing
nerve. But
pagne
A
you
if
think
I
through
it
in cold blood.
me
fellows will give
will
key
heavy silence
me up
fell
I
simply can't do
I
it.
haven't the
a dinner tonight with lots of
cham-
to it."
upon the room. Champagne! The word was
like a knell.
"How on
we going
earth are
to afford
champagne?"
said Victor
Beamish. "Well, there
it
"Gentlemen," quires
more
capital.
Teddy Weeks. "Take it or leave it." Ukridge, "it would seem that the company
is," said
said
How
about
it,
old horses? Let's get together in a
frank, businesslike cards-on-the-table spirit,
can
re-
and see what can be done.
I
bob."
raise ten
"What!" cried the entire assembled company, amazed. "How?"
pawn a banjo." "You haven't got a banjo." "No, but George Tupper has, and "I'll
Started in this spirited way, the
know where he keeps it." subscriptions came pouring I
in.
contributed a cigarette-case, Bertram Fox thought his landlady would
him owe
for
I
let
another week, Robert Dunhill had an uncle in Kensington
who, he fancied, if tactfully approached, would be good for a quid, and Victor Beamish said that if the advertisement-manager of the O-So-Eesi Piano-Player was churlish enough to refuse an advance of five shillings against future work he misjudged him sadly. Within a few minutes, in short, the Lightning Drive had produced the impressive total of two pounds six shillings, and we asked Teddy Weeks if he thought that he could get adequately keyed up within the limits of that sum. "I'll try," said Teddy Weeks. So, not unmindful of the fact that the excellent hostelry supplied
champagne
at eight shillings the
quart bottle,
we
fixed the
meeting for
seven o'clock at Barolini's.
Considered
as a social affair,
not a success. Almost from the
not so
much
Teddy Weeks 's keying-up dinner was
start
I
think
we
all
found
it
trying. It
was
the fact that he was drinking deeply of Barolini's eight
champagne while we, from lack of funds, were compelled to confine ourselves to meaner beverages; what really marred the pleasantness of the function was the extraordinary effect the stuff had on Teddy. What was actually in the champagne supplied to Barolini and purveyed by him to the public, such as were reckless enough to drink it, at eight shilling
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
42
maker and his Maker; convert Teddy Weeks from a mild
shillings the bottle
remains a secret between
but three glasses of
it
and rather
He ish's
oily
were enough
young man
to
its
into a truculent swashbuckler.
quarrelled with us. With the soup he was tilting at Victor
theories of Art; the fish found
him
ridiculing
Beam-
Bertram Fox's views
on the future of the motion-picture; and by the time the leg of chicken or, as some held, string salad with dandelion salad arrived opinions the hell-brew had so wrought on him that he had varied on this point begun to lecture Ukridge on his mis-spent life and was urging him in accents audible across the street to go out and get a job and thus acquire sufficient self-respect to enable him to look himself in the face in a mirror without wincing. Not, added Teddy Weeks with what we all thought
—
—
—
uncalled-for offensiveness, that any
do
that.
Having
said
amount
of self-respect was likely to
which, he called imperiously for another eight bobs'-
worth.
We gazed at one another wanly.
However excellent the end towards which all this was tending, there was no denying that it was hard to bear. But policy kept us silent. We recognized that this was Teddy Weeks 's evening and that he must be humoured. Victor Beamish said meekly that Teddy had cleared up a lot of points which had been troubling him for a long time. Bertram Fox agreed that there was much in what Teddy had said about the future of the closeup. And even Ukridge, though his haughty soul was seared to its foundations by the latter's personal remarks, promised to take his homily to heart and act upon it at the earliest possible
moment.
"You'd better!" said Teddy Weeks, belligerently, biting off the end of one of Barolini's best cigars.
"And
there's
another thing
— don't
let
me
hear of your coming and sneaking people's socks again."
"Very
well, laddie," said Ukridge,
humbly.
one person in the world that I despise," said Teddy, bending a red-eyed gaze on the offender, "it's a snock-seeker a seeksnocker a well, you know what I mean." We hastened to assure him that we knew what he meant and he relapsed into a lengthy stupor, from which he emerged three-quarters of an hour later to announce that he didn't know what we intended to do, but that he was going. We said that we were going too, and we paid the bill and did so. Teddy Weeks's indignation on discovering us gathered about him upon the pavement outside the restaurant was intense, and he expressed which was not true that he had it freely. Among other things, he said a reputation to keep up in Soho. "If there
is
—
——
—
—
p.
did
43
Teddy, old horse," said Ukridge, soothingly. "We thought you would like to have all your pals round you when you "It's
just
G. Wodehouse
all
right,
it."
Did what?" "Why, had the accident." "Did
it?
Teddy Weeks
glared at
him
truculently.
Then
his
mood seemed
to
change abruptly, and he burst into a loud and hearty laugh. "Well, of all the silly ideas!" he cried, amusedly. "I'm not going to have an accident. You don't suppose I ever seriously intended to have an accident, do you? It was just my fun." Then, with another sudden change of mood, he seemed to become a victim to an acute unhappiness.
He
stroked Ukridge's
cheek. "Just
my
arm
fun," he repeated.
he asked, pleadingly. "You
meant
and
affectionately,
like
my
"You
don't
a tear rolled
mind my
fun, don't you? All
down
his
fun, do you?"
my
fun.
Never
wanted dinner." The gay humour of it all overcame his sorrow once more. "Funniest thing ever heard," he said cordially. "Didn't want accident, wanted dinner. Dinner daxident, danner dixident," he added, driving home his point. "Well, good night all," he said, cheerily. And, stepping off the kerb on to a banana skin, was instantly knocked ten feet by a passing lorry. to
have an accident
"Two
at
all.
Just
and an arm," said the doctor five minutes later, superintending the removal proceedings. "Gently with that stretcher." It was two weeks before we were informed by the authorities of Charing Gross Hospital that the patient was in a condition to receive visitors.
ribs
A whip-round
secured the price of a basket of
and I were deputed by the shareholders ments and kind enquiries. "Hallo!"
we
to deliver
said in a hushed, bedside
it
fruit,
and Ukridge
with their compli-
manner when
finally
admitted
to his presence.
down, gentlemen," replied the invalid. I must confess even in that first moment to having experienced a slight feeling of surprise. It was not like Teddy Weeks to call us gentlemen. Ukridge, however, seemed to notice nothing amiss. "Well, well, well," he said buoyantly. "And how are you, laddie? We've brought you a few fragments of fruit." "I'm getting along capitally," replied Teddy Weeks, still in that odd precise way which had made his opening words strike me as curious. "And I should like to say that in my opinion England has reason to be proud of the alertness and enterprise of her great journals. The excel"Sit
lence of their reading-matter, the ingenuity of their various competitions,
and above
all,
the go-ahead
spirit
which has resulted
in this
THEBESTOF MODERN HUMOR
44
accident insurance scheme are beyond praise.
Have you
got that
had been
told that
down?"
he enquired. Ukridge and
We
looked at each other.
I
Teddy
was practically normal again, but this sounded like delirium. "Have we got what down, old horse?" asked Ukridge, gently.
Teddy Weeks seemed
surprised.
"Aren't you reporters?"
"How do you mean,
thought you had come from one of these weekly papers that have
"I
been paying
me
insurance mone\-, to interview me," said Teddy Weeks.
exchanged another glance. An uneasy glance this think that already a grim foreboding had begun to cast its shadow
Ukridge and time.
I
reporters?"
I
over us. "Surely you
remember me, Teddy,
old horse?" said Ukridge, anx-
iously.
Teddy Weeks knit his brow, concentrating painfully. "Why, of course," he said at last. "You're Ukridge, aren't you?" "That's right. Ukridge."
"Of course. Ukridge." "Yes. Ukridge.
Funny your
'Tes," said Tedd\ Weeks.
me
forgetting "It's
the effect of the shock
bowled
suppose.
has had the effect of rendering
The
It
I
doctors here are very interested.
I
can remember some things
a
complete blank."
"Oh, but
I
say,
I
got
when
must have been struck on the head,
that thing
over.
me!"
my memory
They
say
perfectly, but in
I
rather uncertain.
most unusual case. some ways my memory is a
it is
old horse," quavered Ukridge.
"I
suppose you
"
haven't forgotten about that insurance, have you?
"Oh, no.
I
remember
that."
Ukridge breathed a relieved
sigh.
was a subscriber to a number of weekly papers," went on Teddy Weeks. "They are paying me insurance money now." "Yes, yes, old horse," cried Ukridge. "But what I mean is, you "I
remember the Syndicate, Teddy Weeks raised
don't you?" his e> ebrows.
What Syndicate?" "Why, when we all got together and put up
"Syndicate?
the
money
to
pay for
choose which of us should go out and have an accident and collect the money. And you drew it, don't you remember?" the subscriptions to these papers and drew
lots, to
Utter astonishment, and a shocked astonishment at that, spread itself
over Teddy Weeks's countenance.
The man seemed
outraged.
G. Wodehouse
p.
"I certainly
remember nothing
cannot imagine myself
for a
moment
45
of the kind," he said severely. "I
consenting to become a party to
what from your own account would appear to have been a criminal conspiracy to obtain money under false pretences from a number of "
weekly papers. "But, laddie—"
"However," said Teddy Weeks, "if there is any truth in this story, no doubt you have documentary evidence to support it." Ukridge looked at me. I looked at Ukridge. There was a long silence. "Shift ho, old horse?" said Ukridge, sadly.
"No,"
I
replied, with equal
gloom.
"May
"No use staying on
here."
as well go."
"Glad to have seen you," said Teddy Weeks, "and thanks for the fruit."
The
man he was coming out of a manager's Haymarket. He had on a new Homburg hat of a delicate
next time
office in the
saw the
I
and a new blue flannel suit, beautifully cut, He was looking jubilant, and, as I passed him,
pearl grey, spats to match,
with an invisible red
he drew from It
his
twill.
pocket a gold cigarette-case.
was shortly
the juvenile lead in
you remember, that he made a big hit as that piece at the Apollo and started on his sensational
after that,
if
career as a matinee idol. Inside the church the organ had swelled into the familiar music of
the
Wedding March. A verger came out and opened the
doors.
The
five
cooks ceased their reminiscences of other and smarter weddings at which they had participated.
costermonger moved elled
and unshaven
The cameramen unshipped
his
man
their cameras.
barrow of vegetables a pace forward. at
my
A
The
dishev-
side uttered a disapproving growl.
"Idle rich!" said the dishevelled
man.
Out of the church came a beauteous being, arm another being, somewhat less beauteous.
leading attached to his
There was no denying the spectacular effect of Teddy Weeks. He was handsomer than ever. His sleek hair, gorgeously waved, shone in the sun, his eyes were large and bright; his lissome frame, garbed in faultless morning-coat and trousers, was that of an Apollo. But his bride gave the impression that Teddy had married money. They paused in the doorway, and the cameramen became active and fussy. "Have you got a shilling, laddie?" said Ukridge in a low, level voice. "Why do you want a shilling?" "Old horse," said Ukridge, tensely, "it is of the utmost vital importance that I have a shilling here and now." I passed it over. Ukridge turned to the dishevelled man, and I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
46
perceived that he held in his hand a large rich tomato of juicy and overripe appearance.
"Would you like to earn a bob?" Ukridge "Would I!" replied the dishevelled man.
said.
Ukridge sank his voice to a hoarse whisper.
The cameramen had head thrown back
many female
in that gallant
hearts,
Teddy Weeks, his way which has endeared him to so
finished their preparations.
was exhibiting
his celebrated teeth.
The
cooks, in
undertones, were making adverse comments on the appearance of the bride.
"Now, please," said one of the cameramen. Over the heads of the crowd, well and truly aimed, whizzed a large juicy tomato. It burst like a shell full between Teddy Weeks 's expressive eyes, obliterating them in scarlet ruin. It spattered Teddy Weeks's collar, it dripped on Teddy Weeks's morning-coat. And the dishevelled man turned abruptly and raced off down the
Ukridge grasped
my
street.
arm. There was a look of deep content in his
eyes.
Arm
in
arm, we strolled off in the pleasant June sunshine.
Ring Lardner THE RUSHER'S HONEYMOON EXCERPT FROM You Know Me A/
an introduction to the 1959 edition of the book, the author's son, John Lardner, wrote: "The busher letters were not written with artistic prestige [In
in
mind. They were written because there was an urgent need around the
home
of the two hundred dollars that each of the
from The Saturday Evening publish them, the letters
Post.
made
.
.
.
Almost
as
their author as
the United States. (They were to keep
first
installments brought
soon
as the Post
famous
him famous
began to
as the President of
in the
same degree
throughout the next two or three administrations.) This turn of events startled
my
father, but
written as literature."
it
totally failed to
cause him to think of what he had
— ED.] Chicago,
Illinois,
October
ij.
would not be writeing so much to you now that I am a married man. Yes Al I and Florrie was married the day before yesterday just like I told you we was going to be and Al I am the happyest man in the world though I have spent $30 in the last 3 days incluseive. You was wise Al to get married in Bedford where not nothing is nearly half so dear. My expenses was as follows:
Friend Al: Well Al
License
it
looks as
if I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
48
$30 and
I
do not know what
I
me
I
brother-in-law Allen told
thought
it
should be about $2 the same as the license so
difference and give
him
never see him again so his business to
me
have did with that other $0.60. My new should ought to give the preist $5 and I
$3.50.
I
I
split
the
never seen him before and probily won't
why should
marry couples? But
I
I
give
like to
him anything do the
at all
right thing.
when it is You know
Al. I
thought we would be
say here a few
in
Bedford by
more days because she
Allen and his wife
is
this
time but Florrie wants to
says she wants to be with her sister.
thinking about takeing a
flat
for the winter instead
down to Waco Texas where they live. I don't see no sense in that when it costs so much to live here but it is none of my business if they want to throw their money away. But I am glad I got a wife with some sense though she kicked because I did not get no room with a bath of going
which would cost me $2 a day instead of $1.50. I says I guess the clubhouse is still open yet and if I want a bath I can go over there and take the shower. She says Yes and I suppose I can go and jump in the lake. But she would not do that Al because the lake here is cold at this time of the year.
you about my expenses I did not include in it the meals because we would be eating them if I was getting married or not getting married only I have to pay for six meals a day now instead of three and I didn't used to eat no lunch in the playing season except once in a while when I knowed I was not going to work that afternoon. I had a meal ticket which had not quite ran out over to a resturunt on Indiana Ave and we eat there for the first day except at night when I took Allen and his wife to the show with us and then he took us to a chop suye resturunt. I guess you have not never had no chop suye Al and I am here to tell you you have not missed nothing but when Allen was going to buy the supper what could I say? I could not say nothing. Well yesterday and to-day we been eating at a resturunt on Cottage Grove Ave near the hotel and at the resturunt on Indiana that I had the meal ticket at only I do not like to buy no new meal ticket when I am not going to be round here no more than a few days. Well Al I guess the meals has cost me all together about $1.50 and I have eat very little myself. Florrie always wants desert ice cream or something and that runs up into money faster than regular stuff like stake and ham and eggs. Well Al Florrie says it is time for me to keep my promise and take her to the moveing pictures which is $0.20 more because the one she likes round here costs a dime apeace. So I must close for this time and will see you soon. Your pal, Jack
When
I
told
Ring Lardner
49
Chicago, Al: Just a note Al to
where have took
yet
I
a
tell
you why
at
I
Meentime
this time.
22.
Allen and his wife
Allen's wife wants Florrie to it is
costing
me
am paying $10 me and what good am I getting
the hotel and for meals besides
October
have not yet came to Bedford
would be long before furnished flat for the winter and
expected
stay here untill they get settled.
money
I
Illinois,
I
a
a hole lot of
month
rent
house you got for out of it? But Florrie wants to help her sister and what can I say? Though I did make her promise she would not stay no longer than next Saturday at least. So I guess Al we will be home on the evening train Saturday and then may for the
be
I
can save some money.
know Al
you and Bertha will like Florrie when you get acquainted with her spesially Bertha though Florrie dresses pretty swell and spends a hole lot of time fusing with her face and her hair. She says to me to-night Who are you writeing to and I told her Al Blanchard who I have told you about a good many times. She says I bet you are writeing to some girl and acted like as though she was kind of jealous. So I thought I would tease her a little and I says I don't know no girls except you and Violet and Hazel. Who is Violet and Hazel? she says. I kind of laughed and says Oh I guess I better not tell you and then she says I guess you will tell me. That made me kind of mad because no girl can't tell me what to do. She says Are you going to tell me? and I says No. Then she says If you don't tell me I will go over to Marie's that is her sister Allen's wife and stay all night. I says Go on and she went downstairs but I guess she probily went to get a soda because she has some money of her own that I give her. This was about two hours ago and she is probily down in the hotel lobby now trying to scare me by makeing me believe she has went to her sister's. But she can't fool me Al and I am now going out to mail this letter and get a beer. I won't never tell her about Violet and Hazel if she is going to act like that. Yours truly, Jack. I
that
October 24. told you Al that we would be home Saturday Chicago,
Illinois,
Friend Al: I guess I evening. I have changed my mind. Allen and his wife has a spair bedroom and wants us to come there and stay a week or two. It won't cost nothing except they will probily want to go out to the moving pictures nights and we will probily have to go along with them and I am a man Al that wants to pay his share and not be cheap. I and Florrie had our first quarrle the other night. I guess I told you the start of it but I don't remember. I made some crack about Violet and
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
50
and she wanted to know who they was and I would not tell her. So she gets sore and goes over to Marie's to stay all night. I was just kidding Al and was willing to tell her about them two poor girls whatever she wanted to know except that I don't like to brag about girls being stuck on me. So I goes over to Marie's after her and tells her all about them except that I turned them down cold at the last minute to marry her because I did not want her to get all swelled up. She made me sware that I did not never care nothing about them and that was easy because it was the truth. So she come back to the hotel with me just like I knowed she would when I ordered her to. Hazel
just to tease Florrie
They must not be no mistake about who is the boss in my house. Some men lets their wife run all over them but I am not that kind. You know me Al. I must get busy and pack my suitcase if I am going to move over to Allen's.
even
way
if
I
we go
in a
down know
morning so
sent three collars and a shirt to the laundrey this
over there to-night
day or two.
to the corner
the kind
it is,
I
I
will
have to take another
won't mind Al because they
sell
trip
my
this
kind of beer
and I never seen it sold nowheres else in Chi. You eh Al? I wish I was lifting a few with you to-night.
Your Chicago,
Dear Old
back
Al: Florrie and Marie has went
Illinois,
pal, Jack.
October
28.
downtown shopping
because Florrie thinks she has got to have a new dress though she has got two changes of cloths
now and
I
don't
know what she can do with
hope she don't find none to suit her though it would not hurt none if she got something for next spring at a reduckshon. I guess she must think I am Charles A. Comiskey or somebody. Allen has went to a colledge football game. One of the reporters give him a pass. I don't see nothing in football except a lot of scrapping between little slobs that I could lick the whole bunch of them so I did not care to go. The reporter is one of the guys that travled round with our club all summer. He called up and said he hadn't only the one pass but he was not hurting my feelings none because I would not go to no rotten football game if they payed me. The flat across the hall from this here one is for rent furnished. They want $40 a month for it and I guess they think they must be lots of suckers running round loose. Marie was talking about it and says Why don't you and Florrie take it and then we can be right together all winter long and have some big times? Florrie says It would be all right with me. What about it Jack? I says What do you think I am? I don't have to live another one.
I
Ring Lardner in
no high
price
flat
when
I
got a
home
people trying to hold everybody up
more about where
am
I
it
when
going to
they seen
I
all
was
live sister-in-law
51
in
Bedford where they
no no
ain't
the time. So they did not say
Nobody cannot
in ernest.
or no sister-in-law.
If
I
tell
me
was to rent
would be paying $50 a month rent includeing the house down in Bedford. Fine chance Al. Well Al I am lonesome and thirsty so more later. Your pal, Jack the rotten old
flat I
Chicago,
Friend Al: Well Al
I
got
to Bedford this winter after
all
some
big
news
for you.
make
except to
a
November 2. am not comeing
Illinois,
visit
I
which
I
guess will
be round Xmas. I changed my mind about that flat across the hall from the Aliens and decided to take it after all. The people who was in it and
owns the furniture says they would let us have it till the 1 of May if we would pay $42.50 a month which is only $2.50 a month more than they would of let us have it for for a short time. So you see we got a bargain because it is all furnished and everything and we won't have to blow no money on furniture besides the club goes to California the middle of Febuery so Florrie would not have no place to stay while I am away. The Aliens only subleased their flat from some other people till the 2 of Febuery and when I and Allen goes West Marie can come over and stay with Florrie so you see it is best all round. If we should of boughten furniture it would cost us in the neighborhod of $100 even without no piano and they is a piano in this here flat which makes it nice because Florrie plays pretty good with one hand and we can have lots of good times at
home
expenses.
I
without
it
costing us nothing except just the bear liveing
consider myself lucky to of found out about this before
it
was
somebody else had of gotten the tip. Now Al old pal I want to ask a great favor of you Al. I all ready have payed one month rent $10 on the house in Bedford and I want you to see the old man and see if he won't call off that lease. Why should I be paying $10 a month rent down there and $42.50 up here when the house down there is not no good to me because I am liveing up here all winter? See Al? Tell him I will gladly give him another month rent to call off the lease but don't tell him that if you don't have to. I want to be fare with too late and
him.
do this favor for me, Al, kindest to Bertha and tell her I am sorry away but you see how it is Al. If
you
will
Give
I
won't never forget
I
and Florrie won't see her
it.
my
right
Yours, Jack.
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
52
Chicago,
Friend Al:
I
have not wrote
Illinois,
for a long time
have
I
November Al but
I
30.
have
been very busy. They was not enough furniture in the flat and we have been buying some more. They was enough for some people maybe but I and Florrie is the kind that won't have nothing but the best. The furniture them people had in the liveing room was oak but they had a bookcase bilt in in the flat that was mohoggeny and Florrie would not stand for no joke combination like that so she moved the oak chairs and table in to the spair bedroom and we went downtown to buy some mohoggeny. But it costs to much Al and we was feeling pretty bad about it when we seen some Sir Cashion walnut that was prettier even than the mohoggeny and not near so expensive. It is not no real Sir Cashion walnut but it is just as good and we got it reasonable. Then we got some mission chairs for the dining room because the old ones was just straw and was no good and we got a big lether couch for $9 that somebody can sleep on if we get to much company. I hope you and Bertha can come up for the holidays and see how comfertible we are fixed. That is all the new furniture we have boughten but Florrie set her heart on some old Rose drapes and a red table lamp that is the biggest you ever seen Al and I did not have the heart to say no. The hole thing cost me in the neighborhood of $110 which is very little for what we got and then it will always be ourn even when we move away from this flat though we will have to leave the furniture that belongs to the other people but their part of it is not no good anyway. I guess I told you Al how much money I had when the season ended. It was $1400 all told includeing the city serious money. Well Al I got in the neighborhood of $800 left because I give $200 to Florrie to send down to Texas to her other sister who had a bad egg for a husband that managed a club in the Texas Oklahoma League and this was the money she had to pay to get the divorce. I am glad Al that I was lucky enough to marry happy and get a good girl for my wife that has got some sense and besides if I have got $800 left I should not worry as they say.
Your
pal, Jack.
December 7. Dear Old Al: No I was in ernest Al when I says that I wanted you and Bertha to come up here for the holidays. I know I told you that I might come to Bedford for the holidays but that is all off. I have gave up the idea of comeing to Bedford for the holidays and I want you to be sure and come up here for the holidays and I will show you a good time. I Chicago,
Illinois,
Ring Lardner
have Bertha come
53
and she can come if she wants to only Florrie don't know if she would have a good time or not and thinks maybe she would rather stay in Bedford and you come alone. But be sure and have Bertha come if she wants to come but maybe she would
would love
to
not injoy
You know
I
if
it.
best Al.
don't think the old
he wants to
stick
me
to
man
me no square deal on that lease but am grateful to you Al for trying to fix it
give
all right.
I
up but maybe you could of did better if you had of went at it in a different way. I am not finding no fault with my old pal though. Don't think that. When I have a pal I am the man to stick to him threw thick and thin. If
man
the old
going to hold
is
me
to that lease
I
guess
I
will
have to stand
month because I am going to get $2800 next year besides the city serious money and maybe we will get into the World Serious too. I know we will if Callahan will pitch me every 3d day like I wanted him to last season. But if you had of approached the old man in a different way maybe you could of fixed it it
and
up.
I
I
guess
won't starv to death for no $10 a
I
wish you would
We
try
had Allen and
dinner cost
me
it
again Al
his wife
better than $5.
I
if it is
not no trouble.
here for thanksgiveing dinner and the
thought we had enough to eat to
last a
week but about six o'clock at night Florrie and Marie said they was hungry and we went downtown and had dinner all over again and I payed for it and it cost me $5 more. Allen was all ready to pay for it when Florrie said No this day's treat is on us so I had to pay for it but I don't see why she did not wait and let me do the talking. I was going to pay for it
any way.
Be sure and come and Bertha wants to
come
visit
us for the holidays Al and of coarse
bring her along.
won't never go back on a friend and
We will be glad to see you both.
pal.
You know me
Friend Al:
I
I
Al.
Your Chicago,
if
old pal, Jack.
Illinois,
December 20.
don't see what can be the matter with Bertha because
you know Al we would not care how she dressed and would not make no kick if she come up here in a night gown. She did not have no license to say we was to swell for her because we did not never think of nothing like that. I wish you would talk to her again Al and tell her she need not get sore on me and that both her and you is welcome at my house any time I ask you to come. See if you can't make her change her mind Al because I feel like as if she must of took offense at something I may of wrote you. I am sorry you and her are not comeing but I suppose you know best. Only we was getting all ready for you and Florrie said only
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
54
the other day that she wished the holidays was over but that was before
she knowed you was not comeing.
Well Al
You have
I
guess there
is
I
hope you can come
Al.
not no use talking to the old
man no
more.
you could but I wish I could of came down there and talked to him. I will pay him his rotten old $10 a month and the next time I come to Bedford and meet him on the street I will bust his jaw. I know he is a old man Al but I don't like to see nobody get the best of me and I am sorry I ever asked him to let me off. Some of them old skinflints has no heart Al but why should I fight with a old man over chicken feed like $10? Florrie says a star pitcher like I should not ought never to scrap about little things and I guess she is right Al so I will pay the old man his $10 a month if I have to. Florrie says she is jealous of me writeing to you so much and she says she would like to meet this great old pal of mine. I would like to have her meet you to Al and I would like to have you change your mind and come and visit us and I am sorry you can't come Al. Yours truly. Jack. did the best
Chicago, Illinois, December ij.
Old
though I thought this Allen had some sense. I thought he was different from the most and was not no rummy but they are all alike Al and they are all lucky that somebody don't hit them over the head with a ax and kill them but I guess at that you could not hurt no lefthanders by hitting them over the head. We was all down on State St. the day before Xmas and the girls was all tired
Pal:
I
guess
all
these lefthanders
is
alike
home but Allen says No I guess we better stick because now the crowds is out and it will be fun to watch
out and ready to go
down
a while
them. So we walked up and down State
St.
about a hour longer and
we come in front of a big jewlry store window and in it was a swell dimond ring that was marked $100. It was a ladies' ring so Marie says to Allen Why don't you buy that for me? And Allen says Do you really want it? And she says she did. So we tells the girls to wait and we goes over to a salloon where Allen has got a friend and gets a check cashed and we come back and he bought the ring. Then Florrie looks like as though she was getting all finally
had not boughten her no ring not even when we was engaged. So I and Allen goes back to the salloon and I gets a check cashed and we come back and bought another ring but I did not think the ring Allen had boughten was worth no $100 so I gets one for $75. Now Al you know I am not makeing no kick on spending a little money for a present for my own ready to cry and
I
asked her what was the matter and she says
I
Ring Lardner
55
had allready boughten her a rist watch for $15 and a rist watch was just what she had wanted. I was wilHng to give her the ring if she had not of wanted the rist watch more than the ring but when I give her the ring I kept the rist watch and did not tell her nothing about it. Well I come downtown alone the day after Xmas and they would not take the rist watch back in the store where I got it. So I am going to give it to her for a New Year's present and I guess that will make Allen feel like a dirty doose. But I guess you cannot hurt no lefthander's feelwife but
I
ings at that.
curve
They
and a
ball
are
all alike.
But Allen has not got nothing but a dinky
fast ball that looks like
my
slow one.
If
Comiskey was
not good hearted he would of sold him long ago. I
sent you and Bertha a cut glass dish Al which was the best
I
could
was pretty high pricet at that. We was glad to get the pretty pincushions from you and Bertha and Florrie says to tell you that we are well supplied with pincushions now because the ones you sent makes a even half dozen. Thanks Al for remembering us and
money and
get for the
it
thank Bertha too though
I
guess you paid for them.
Your Chicago,
Old a table at
Pal: Al
I
been pretty
sick ever since
of the swell resturunts
1
my
New
downtown and
I
pal, Jack.
Illinois,
Januery
Year's eve.
We
never seen so
3.
had
much
would rather of had beer but they would not sell us none so I found out that they was a certain kind that you can get for $1 a bottle and it is just as good as the kind that has got all them fancy
wine drank
names but oclock and
in
life. I
this lefthander starts it
ordering
was $5 a bottle and the
girls
some other kind about
both says they liked
it
11
better.
I
would of gave $0.20 for a big stine of my kind of beer. You know me Al. Well Al you know they is not nobody that can drink more than your old pal and I was all O. K. at one oclock but I seen the girls was getting kind of sleepy so I says we better go home. Then Marie says Oh, shut up and don't be no quiter. I says You better shut up yourself and not be telling me to shut up, and she says What will you do if I don't shut up? And I says I would bust her in the jaw. But you know Al I would not think of busting no girl. Then Florrie says You better not start nothing because you had to much to drink or you would not be talking about busting girls in the jaw. Then I says I could not see a hole
don't care all
if it is
a girl
Well Al
I
am
I
of difference myself and
bust or a lefthander.
I
I
did not
mean nothing
at
had insulted Allen and he gets up and slaps my not going to stand that from nobody not even if he is
Al but Marie says
face.
lot
I
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
56
my
brother-in-law and a lefthander that has not got
brake a pain of
enough speed
to
glass.
him
and the waiters butts in and puts us all out for fighting and I and Florrie comes home in a taxi and Allen and his wife don't get in till about 5 oclock so I guess she must of had to of took him to a doctor to get fixed up. I been in bed ever since till just this morning kind of sick to my stumach. I guess I must of eat something that did not agree with me. Allen come over after breakfast this morning and asked me was I all right so I guess he is not sore over the beating I give him or else he wants to make friends because he has saw that I am a bad guy to monkey with.
So
I
give
a good beating
me a little while my money because
Florrie tells
resturunt with
of a cheap skate he
won't
tell
is
ago that she paid the hole
Allen was broke so you see what kind
Al and some day
me how much
the
bill
I
am
was and
because we had a good time outside of the spent a
little
the
bill at
I
going to bust his jaw. She
won't ask her to no more
fight
and what do
I
care
if
we
money? Yours Chicago,
truly, Jack.
Illinois,
Januery 20.
Friend Al: Allen and his wife have gave up the flat across the hall from us and come over to live with us because we got a spair bedroom and why should they not have the bennifit of it? But it is pretty hard for the girls to have to cook and do the work when they is four of us so I have a hired girl who does it all for $7 a week. It is great stuff Al because now we can go round as we please and don't have to wait for no dishes to be washed or nothing. We generally almost always has dinner downtown in the evening so it is pretty soft for the girl too. She don't generally have no more than one meal to get because we generally run round downtown till late and don't get up till about noon. That sounds funny don't it Al, when I used to get up at 5 every morning down home. Well Al I can tell you something else that may sound funny and that is that I lost my taste for beer. I don't seem to care for it no more and I found I can stand allmost as many drinks of other stuff as I could of beer. I guess Al they is not nobody ever lived can drink more and stand up better under it than me. I make the girls and Allen quit every night. I
Marie
only got just time to write you this short note because Florrie and is
giving a big party to-night and
I
out of the house and stay out of the way Marie's berthday and she says she
is
and Allen have got till
to beat
they get things ready.
22 but say Al
if
she
is
it
It is
22 Kid Gleason
Ring Lardner is
Well Al the
30.
girls
says
we must blow
57
so
I
will
run out and mail
this
letter.
Yours
truly, Jack.
Chicago, Illinois, Januery 31. Al: Allen
going to take Marie with him on the training
is
California and of course Florrie has been at
me
her postivly that she can't go.
no stunt
am up
against
it
to
I
know what
can't afford to
trip to
to take her along. like that
told
I
but
still I
do with her while we are on the
trip
because Marie won't be here to stay with her. I don't like to leave her here all alone but they is nothing to it Al I can't afford to take her along.
She I
says
I
don't see
That
says
stuff
is
why you all
O. K.
can't take for Allen
me
if
Allen takes Marie.
And
because him and Marie has
been grafting off of us all winter. And then she gets mad and tells me I should not ought to say her sister was no grafter. I did not mean nothing like that Al but you don't never know when a woman is going to take offense.
our furniture was down in Bedford everything would be all O. K. because I could leave her there and I would feel all O. K. because I would know that you and Bertha would see that she was getting along If
O. K. But they would not be no sense in sending her down to a house that has not no furniture in it. I wish I knowed somewheres where she
would be willing to pay her bord even. Well Al enough for this time.
could
visit Al. I
Your
Chicago,
old pal, Jack.
Illinois,
Febuery
4.
Friend Al: You are a real old pal Al and I certainly am greatful to you for the invatation. I have not told Florrie about it yet but I am sure she will be tickled to death and it is certainly kind of you old pal. I did not never dream of nothing like that. I note what you say Al about not excepting no bord but I think it would be better and I would feel better if you would take something say about $2 a week. I know Bertha will like Florrie and that they will get along O. K. together because Florrie can learn her how to make her cloths look good and fix her hair and fix up her face. I feel like as if you had took a big load off of If
me Al
and
I
won't never forget
you don't think
I
it.
should pay no bord for Florrie
Suit
all right.
yourself about that old pal.
We are leaveing here the
20 of Febuery and
if
you don't mind
I
will
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
58
down
bring Florrie
again and spesially
you about the you and Bertha. to
18. I
would
like to see
bunch
the old
Yours, Jack. P. S.
wish
we
We will
only be away
did not have
Old
Pal:
I
no
want
to
flat
till
April 14
and that
is
Chicago,
Illinois,
just a nice visit.
I
on our hands. Febuery
9.
thank you for asking Florrie to come down there
and visit you Al but I find she can't get away. I did not know she had no engagements but she says she may go down to her folks in Texas and she don't want to say that she will come to visit you when it is so indefanate. So thank you just the same Al and thank Bertha too. Florrie
is still
at
me
to take her along to California but honest Al
I
do it. I am right down to my last $50 and I have not payed no rent this month. I owe the hired girl 2 weeks' salery and both I and Florrie
can't for
needs some
new
cloths.
came in since some more about
Florrie has just
have been talking
started writing this letter
I
California and she says
and we
maybe
if I
would ask Comiskey he would take her along as the club's guest. I had not never thought of that Al and maybe he would because he is a pretty good scout and I guess I will go and see him about it. The league has its skedule meeting here tomorrow and may be I can see him down to the hotel where they meet at. I am so worried Al that I can't write no more but
I
will tell
you how
I
come out
with Comiskey.
Your Chicago,
Illinois,
pal, Jack.
Febuery
11.
Friend Al: I am up against it right Al and I don't know where I am going to head in at. I went down to the hotel where the league was holding its skedule meeting at and I seen Comiskey and got some money off of the club but I owe all the money I got off of them and I am still wondering what to do about Florrie. Comiskey was busy in the meeting when I went down there and they was not no chance to see him for a while so I and Allen and some of the boys hung round and had a few drinks and fanned. This here Joe Hill the busher that Detroit has got that Violet is hooked up to was round the hotel.
I
don't
me
know what
for but
I
felt like
busting his jaw only the
had better not do nothing because I might kill him and any way he probily won't be in the league much longer. Well finally Comiskey got threw the meeting and I seen him and he says Hello young man what can I do for you? And I says I would like to get $100 advance
boys told
I
Ring Lardner
money. He
says
Have you been
59
takeing care of yourself down in Bedford?
And I told him I had been liveing here all winter and it did not seem to make no hit with him though I don't see what business it is of hisn where I
live.
had been takeing good care of myself. And I have Al. You know that. So he says I should come to the ball park the next day which is today and he would have the secretary take care of me but I says I could not wait and so he give me $100 out of his pocket and says he would have it charged against my salery. I was just going to brace him about the California trip when he got away and went back to the
So
I
says
I
meeting.
hung round with the bunch waiting for him to get threw again and we had some more drinks and finally Comiskey was threw again and I braced him in the lobby and asked him if it was all right to Well Al
take
my
I
He
wife along to California.
have her along.
And then
I
says
says Sure they
Would
sisters that
would
like to
to
the club pay her
fair?
He
He
says
Have you
guess you must of spent that $100 buying
not got no
would be glad
some
nerve:
go along to?
He
says
says
I
Does your wife
on the drawing room or will she take a lower birth? He says Is my special train good enough for her? Then he turns away from me and I guess some of the boys must of heard the stuff he pulled because they was laughing when he went away but I did not see nothing to laugh at. But I guess he ment that I would have to pay her fair if she goes along and that is out of the question Al. I am up against it and I don't know where I am going to head in at. Your pal, Jack. insist
Chicago, Illinois, Febuery
Dear Old hopeing
it
will.
Al:
I
When
guess everthing will be I
told Florrie
she bawled her head off and call a
I
about
O. K. now at least I am come out with Comiskey
all
how I
thought for a while
doctor or something but pretty soon she cut
Then she
12.
I
was going
it
out and
to
we
have to
sat there
you could get your salery razed a couple of hundred dollars a year would you borrow the money ahead somewheres and take me along to California? I says Yes I would if I could get a couple hundred dollars more salery but how could I do that when I had signed a contract for $2800 last fall allready? She says Don't you think you are worth more than $2800? And I says Yes of coarse I was worth more than $2800. She says Well if you will go and talk the right way to Comiskey I believe he will give you $3000 but you must be sure you go at it the right way and don't go and ball it all up. a while without saying nothing.
says If
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
6o
Well we argude about
it
a while because
I
don't want to hold no-
body up Al but finally I says I would. It would not be holding nobody up anyway because I am worth $3000 to the club if I am worth a nichol. The papers is all saying that the club has got a good chance to win the pennant this year and talking about the pitching staff and I guess they would not be no pitching staff much if it was not for I and one or two about one other I guess. others So it looks like as if everything will be all O. K. now Al. I am going to the office over to the park to see him the first thing in the morning and I am pretty sure that I will get what I am after because if I do not he will see that I am going to quit and then he will see what he is up against and not let me get away. I will let you know how I come out.
—
Your Chicago,
Friend Al: Al old to the Federal League.
guess
I
told
my own
I
a thing or
figure before
no chance I
him
pal
to offer
me
I
I
Illinois,
have got a big supprise
had 2. I
a
pal, Jack.
for you.
Febuery I
am
14.
going
run in with Comiskey yesterday and
guess he would of been glad to sign
got threw but
I
was so mad
I
me
I
at
would not give him
another contract.
got out to the park at 9 oclock yesterday morning and
it
was a
hour before he showed up and then he kept me waiting another hour before he showed up and then he kept me waiting another hour so I was pretty sore when I finally went in to see him. He says Well young man what can I do for you? I says I come to see about my contract. He says Do you want to sign up for next year all ready? I says No I am talking about this year. He says I thought I and you talked business last fall. And I says Yes but now I think I am worth more money and I want to sign a contract for $3000. He says If you behave yourself and work good this year I will see that you are took care of. But I says That won't do because I have got to be sure I am going to get $3000. Then he says I am not sure you are going to get anything. I says What do you mean? And he says I have gave you a very fare contract and if you don't want to live up to it that is your own business. So I give him a awful call Al and told him I would jump to the Federal League. He says Oh, I would not do that if I was you. They are having a hard enough time as it is. So I says something back to him and he did not say nothing to me and I beat it out of the office. I have not told Florrie about the Federal League business yet as I
am going to give her a big supprise. me on the training trip and pay her
I
bet they will take her along with
fair
but even
if
they don't
I
should
Ring Lardner
not worry because
and then I
I
will
make them
give
can afford to take her with
I
61
me
me on
a contract for $4000 a year all
the
trips.
go down and see Tinker to-morrow morning and
will
you to-morrow night Al how much salery they are going I won't sign for no less than $4000. You know me Al.
I
will write
to give
me. But
Yours, Jack. Chicago, Illinois, Febuery
Old times and
Pal: I
It is
pretty near midnight Al but
can't get
no
sleep.
I
am
I
been
to
1^.
bed a couple of
worried to death Al and
I
don't
know
where I am going to head in at. Maybe I will go out and buy a gun Al and end it all and I guess it would be better for everybody. But I cannot do that Al because I have not got the money to buy a gun with. I went down to see Tinker about signing up with the Federal League and he was busy in the office when I come in. Pretty soon Buck Perry the pitcher that was with Boston last year come out and seen me and as Tinker was still busy we went out and had a drink together. Buck shows me a contract for $5000 a year and Tinker had allso gave him a $500 bonus. So pretty soon I went up to the office and pretty soon Tinker seen me and called me into his private office and asked what did I want. I says I was ready to jump for $4000 and a bonus. He says I thought you was signed up with the White Sox. I says Yes I was but I was not satisfied. He says That does not make no difference to me if you are satisfied or not. You ought to of came to me before you signed a contract. I says I did not know enough but I know better now. He says Well it is to late now. We cannot have nothing to do with you because you have went and signed a contract with the White Sox. I argude with him a while and asked him to come out and have a drink so we could talk it over but he said he was busy so they was nothing for me to do but blow. So I am not going to the Federal League Al and I will not go with the White Sox because I have got a raw deal. Comiskey will be sorry for what he done when his team starts the season and is up against it for good pitchers and then he will probily be willing to give me anything I ask for but that don't do me no good now Al. I am way in debt and no chance to get no money from nobody. I wish I had of stayed with Terre Haute Al and never saw this league. Your pal, Jack. Chicago, Illinois, Febuery
Friend Al: Al don't never lefthanders ters
is
right.
This Allen
let
nobody
my own
has been grafting and spongeing on
tell
you that these here
brother-in-law
me
all
ly.
who married
winter Al.
sis-
Look what he
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
62
done to me now Al. You know how hard I been up against it for money and I know he has got plenty of it because I seen it on him. Well Al I was scared to tell Florrie I was cleaned out and so I went to Allen yesterday and says I had to have $100 right away because I owed the rent and owed the hired girl's salery and could not even pay no grocery bill. And he says No he could not let me have none because he has got to save all his money to take his wife on the trip to California. And here he has been liveing on me all winter and maybe I could of took my wife to California if I had not of spent all my money takeing care of this no good lefthander and his wife. And Al honest he has not got a thing and ought not to be in the league. He gets by with a dinky curve ball and has not got no more smoke than a rabbit or something. Well Al I felt like busting him in the jaw but then I thought No I might kill him and then I would have Marie and Florrie both to take care of and God knows one of them is enough besides paying his funeral expenses. So I walked away from him without takeing a crack at him and went into the other room where Florrie and Marie was at. I says to Marie I says Marie I wish you would go in the other room a minute because I want to talk to Florrie. So Marie beats it into the other room and then I tells Florrie all about what Comiskey and the Federal League done to me. She bawled something awful and then she says I was no good and she wished she had not never married me. I says I wisht it too and then she says Do you mean that and starts to cry. I told her I was sorry I says that because they is not no use fusing with girls Al specially when they is your wife. She says No California trip for me and then she says What are you going to do? And I says I did not know. She says Well if I was a man I would do something. So then I got mad and I says I will do something. So I went down to the corner salloon and started in to get good and drunk but I could not do it Al because I did not have the money. Well old pal I am going to ask you a big favor and it is this I want you to send me $100 Al for just a few days till I can get on my feet. I do not know when I can pay it back Al but I guess you know the money is good and I know you have got it. Who would not have it when they live in Bedford? And besides I let you take $20 in June 4 years ago Al and you give it back but I would not have said nothing to you if you had of kept it. Let me hear from you right away old pal. Yours truly, Jack. Chicago, Al: a
little
I
am
certainly greatful to
while ago.
I
will
you Al
pay the rent with
Illinois,
for the $100 it
Febuery
which come
and part of the grocery
19.
just bill
Ring Lardner
and
have to wait a while for hern but she is sure don't never forget my debts. I have changed my mind
guess the hired
I
to get
it
because
I
girl will
about the White Sox and along because in
Chi when her
am
I
see about
I
don't think
I
and
sister
I
am it
all
going over to the it.
63
going to go on the
would not be of us
ball
Comiskey
will tell
is
trip
and take Florrie
right to leave her here alone
going.
park and up in the office pretty soon to
changed
I
my mind and he
will
be glad
me
back because the club has not got no chance to finish nowheres without me. But I won't go on no trip or give the club my services to get
me some more
without them giveing Florrie along with
me
because Al
Maybe Comiskey
I
advance money so as would not go without her.
make my
I
can take
wanted him to when he sees I am willing to be a good fellow and go along with him and when he knows that the Federal League would of gladly gave me $4000 if I had not of signed no contract with the White Sox. I think I will ask him for $200 advance money Al and if I get it may be I can send part of your $100 back to you but I know you cannot be in no hurry Al though you says you wanted it back as soon as possible. You could not be very hard up Al because it don't cost near so much to live in Bedford as it does up here.
Anyway will write
write
you
I
will let
as
you before
soon I
will
you know how
as
I
salery $3000 like
I
come out
get out to Paso Robles
I
with Comiskey and
if I
don't get
have took good care of myself ought to have a great season. I
P. S. Florrie
to
leave.
Your P. S.
no time
I
is
tickled to death
all
pal, Jack.
winter Al and
I
guess
about going along and her and
have some time together out there on the Coast somewheres.
if I
Chicago,
I
I
will
can get some money
Illinois,
Febuery
21.
Friend Al: I have not got the heart to write this letter to you Al. I am up here in my $42. 50 a month flat and the club has went to California and Florrie has went too. I am flat broke Al and all I am asking you is to send me enough money to pay my fair to Bedford and they and all their leagues can go to hell Al.
was out to the ball park early yesterday morning and some of the boys was there allready fanning and kidding each other. They tried to I
kid
me
to
when
come in but I guess I give them as good as they give no mind for kidding Al because I was there on business
I
was not in and I wanted to see Comiskey and get it done with. Well the secretary come in finally and I went up to him and says
me.
I
I
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
64
wanted to see Comiskey right away. He says The boss was busy and what did I want to see him about and I says I wanted to get some advance money because I was going to take my wife on the trip. He says This would be a fine time to be telling us about it even if you was going on the
trip.
And no
trip
I
says
with us
What do you mean? And he says You are not going on because we have got wavers on you and you are sold to
Milwaukee.
Honest Al
thought he was kidding
I
at first
and
I
was waiting
for
he did not laugh and finally I says What do you mean? And he says Cannot you understand no English? You are sold to Milwaukee. Then I says I want to see the boss. He says It won't do you no good to see the boss and he is to busy to see you. I says I want to get some money. And he says You cannot get no money from this club and all you get is your fair to Milwaukee. I says I am not going to no Milwaukee anyway and he says I should not worry about that. Suit yourself. Well Al I told some of the boys about it and they was pretty sore and says I ought to bust the secretary in the jaw and I was going to do it when I thought No I better not because he is a little guy and I might kill
him
to laugh but
him. I
looked
all
over for Kid Gleason but he was not nowheres round
me
he would not get into town till late in the afternoon. If I could of saw him Al he would of fixed me all up. I asked 3 or 4 of the boys for some money but they says they was all broke. But I have not told you the worst of it yet Al. When I come back to the flat Allen and Marie and Florrie was busy packing up and they asked me how I come out. I told them and Allen just stood there stareing like a big rummy but Marie and Florrie both begin to cry and I almost felt like as if I would like to cry to only I am not no baby Al. Well Al I told Florrie she might just as well quit packing and make up her mind that she was not going nowheres till I got money enough to go to Bedford where I belong. She kept right on crying and it got so I could not stand it no more so I went out to get a drink because I still had and they
just
told
about a dollar It
was about
left yet.
2 oclock
when
I
left
the
flat
and pretty near
5
when
I
had ran in to some fans that knowed who I was and would not let me get away and besides I did not want to see no more of Allen and Marie till they was out of the house and on their way. But when I come in Al they was nobody there. They was not nothing there except the furniture and a few of my things scattered round. I sit down for a few minutes because I guess I must of had to much to
come back because
I
Ring Lardner
drink but finally
was
I
65
seen a note on the table addressed to
me and
I
seen
it
Florrie's writeing.
do not remember just what was there in the note Al because I tore it up the minute I read it but it was something about I could not support no wife and Allen had gave her enough money to go back to Texas and she was going on the 6 oclock train and it would not do me no good to try and stop her. Well Al they was not no danger of me trying to stop her. She was not no good Al and I wisht I had not of never saw either she or her sister I
or
my
brother-in-law.
For a minute
would follow Allen and his wife down to the deepo where the special train was to pull out of and wait till I see him and punch his jaw but I seen that would not get me nothing. So here I am all alone Al and I will have to stay here till you send me the money to come home. You better send me $25 because I have got a few little debts I should ought to pay before I leave town. I am not going to Milwaukee Al because I did not get no decent deal and nobody cannot make no sucker out of me. Please hurry up with the $25 Al old friend because I am sick and tired of Chi and want to get back there with my old pal. I
thought
I
Yours, Jack. P. S.
on me.
Al
I
wish
I
had of took poor
little
Violet
when she was
so stuck
Marianne Moore CORRESPONDENCE WITH DAVID WALLACE
The Ford
were composed by Mr. David Wallace but, with one excep-
letters
of his associate, Mr. Robert B.
tion, were transmitted over the signature
Young. Addresses have been omitted here
The Ford that
I
in finding for the special
eminent manufacturer I
exchange of letters.
should correct an impression persisting
letters
succeeded
whereas
after the first
a
name
for the car
did not give the car the
name
it
I
among
new products
inquirers
division of
had been recruited
now
has.
to
an
name;
— Marianne Moore
THE FORD CORRESPONDENCE
FORD MOTOR COMPANY Dearborn, Michigan October
19,
1955
Dear Miss Moore: This is a morning we find ourselves with a problem which, strangely enough, is more in the field of words and the fragile meaning of words than in car-making. And we just wonder whether you might be intrigued with
it
sufficiently to lend us a
Our dilemma
We should
should
like
it
to
is
like
hand.
name for a rather important new this name to be more than a label. a
have a compelling quality
in itself
series of cars.
Specifically,
and by
itself.
we To
convey, through association or other conjuration, some visceral feeling of elegance, fleetness, and advanced features and design.
A
name,
in
short, that flashes a dramatically desirable picture in people's minds.
Over the past few weeks this office has confected a list of three hundred-odd candidates which, it pains me to relate, are characterized
Marianne Moore
67
by an embarrassing pedestrianism.
We
And
one who knows more about
so
we
are seeking the help of
are miles short of our ambition. this sort
of magic than we.
As
how we might go about
to
possibility
that
is
you might care
Wonder which now any event,
all
this matter,
to visit with us
have no
I
idea.
One
and muse with the new
our Advance Styling Studios. But, in would depend on whether you find this overture of some is
in clay in
challenge and interest.
Should we be so fortunate pleased to write
more
fully.
as to
summary,
In
(another "Thunderbird" would be that our relations will be
on
have piqued your fancy, we all
we want
is
will
a colossal
be
name
And, of course, it is expected of an impeccably dignified kind.
fine).
a fee basis
Respectfully,
Robert B. Young
Marketing Research Department Miss Marianne Moore 260 Cumberland Street
Brooklyn
5,
New York October
Let to
me
take
be recruited
it
under advisement, Mr. Young.
in this
I
21, 1955
am complimented
high matter.
have seen and admired "Thunderbird" as a Ford designation. It would be hard to match; but let me, the coming week, talk with my brother who would bring ardor and imagination to bear on the quest. I
Sincerely yours
and your wife's* Marianne Moore Mr. Robert B. Young Marketing Research Division
/
Special Products Division
Ford Motor Company P.O. Box 637 / 16400 Michigan Avenue Dearborn, Michigan
October
27, 1955
Dear Mr. Young:
My
brother thought most of the names
ing to you for your *
His
new
series,
first letter
had considered suggest-
too learned or too labored, but thinks
Mr. Young's wife had met Miss Moore
the incident.
I
at
luncheon
at
Mount Holyoke
I
College.
was reinforced by one from Mrs. Young, written on the same date, recalling
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
68
might ask
if
any of the following approximate the requirements.
THE FORD SILVER SWORD This plant, of which the flower
is
a silver sword,
believe grows only in
I
and on the Hawaiian Island, Maui, on Mount Haleakala (House of the Sun); found at an altitude of from 9,500 to 10,000 feet. (The leaves surrounding the indi\'idual blossoms have a pebbled texsilver-white
Tibet,
—
—
ture that feels like Italian-twist back-stitch all-over embroidery).
My
thought was of a bird
first
series
— the
swallow species
— Hi-
rundo or phonetically, Aerundo. Mahina Hoffman is designing a device for the radiator of a made-to-order Cadillac, and said in her opinion the only term surpassing Thunder-bird would be hurricane; and I then thought Hurricane Hirundo might be the first of a series such as Hurricane aquila (eagle). Hurricane accipiter (hawk), and so on. "A species that takes its dinner on the wing" ("swifts"). If these suggestions are not in character with the car, perhaps you could gi\e its
me
a sketch of
exciting possibilities
mation
is
its
general appearance, or hint as to
some of
— though my brother reminds me that such
infor-
highly confidential. Sincerely yours,
Marianne Moore
November
4,
1955
Dear Miss Moore: I'm delighted that your note implies that you are interested in helping us in our
naming problem.
This being ness world,
ment of
I
so, in
think
compliance with procedures
we should make some
a suitable fee or
definite
in this rigorous busi-
arrangement
for pay-
honorarium before pursuing the problem
further.
One way might
be for you to suggest a figure which could be con-
sidered for mutual acceptance.
Once
this
is
squared away, we
will
look
forward to having you join us in continuing our fascinating search. Sincerely yours,
Robert B. Young
Marketing Research
November
-,
1955
Dear Mr. Young: It is handsome of you to consider remuneration for ser\ice merely enlisted. My fancy would be inhibited, however, by acknowledgment in
Marianne Moore
69
advance of performance. If I could be of specific assistance, we could no doubt agree on some kind of honorarium for the service rendered. I
seem
you could tell me how the obviously from the ideal, I could
to exact participation; but
suggestions submitted strayed
—
if
if
—
then perhaps proceed more nearly in keeping with the Company's objective.
Sincerely yours,
Marianne Moore
November
11,
1955
Dear Miss Moore:
The Youngs' philodendron sure of water to
as,
has just benefited from an extra mea-
pacing about the room,
I
have sought words
to
respond
your generous note.
me
my
quandary thus. It is unspeakably contrary to Procedures here to accept counsel even needed counsel without a firm prior arrangement of conditions (and, indeed, without a Purchase Notice in quadruplicate and three competitive bids). But then, seldom has the auto business had occasion to indulge in so ethereal a matter as this. Let
state
—
So,
should
like
As put
it
if
to
you will risk a mutually satisfactory outcome with to honor your wish for a fancy unencumbered. wherein your earlier suggestions may have "strayed,"
— they did not
for orderly
uriate in
—
at
all.
We
we
us,
as
you
merely proposed a recess in production
bookkeeping. Shipment
1
was
fine
and we would
like to lux-
more of same. Even those your brother regarded
as over-
learned or labored.
For us to impose an ideal on your efforts would, I fear, merely defeat our purpose. We have sought your help to get an approach quite different from our own. In short, we should like suggestions that we ourselves would not have arrived at. And, in sober fact, have not arrived at.
Now we on
end must help you by sending some tangible representation of what we are talking about. Your brother was right; advance designs in Dearborn are something approaching the Sacred. But perhaps this
the enclosed sketches will serve the purpose.
convey the
They
are not IT, but they
feeling.
At the very
least,
they
may
give
you
a sense of participation should
your friend, Malvina Hoffman, break into brisk conversation on radiator caps.
Sincerely yours,
Robert B. Young
Marketing Research
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
JO
November
13,
1955
Dear Mr. Young:
The
sketches.
They
are indeed exciting; they have quality, and the
toucan tones lend tremendous allure the magic
— sustaining
thermore, there
is
— confirmed Looked
down, furbuoyancy. Immediately your word
effects of this kind.
a sense of fish
impeccable sprang to mind. Might
be a
it
imagination.
the
Car-innovation
at upside
possibility?
In any case, the baguette lapidary glamor
spurs
by the wheels. Half
The Impeccable.
you have achieved certainly like
is
launching a
ship
drama.
am
I
by no means sure that
performance with elegance
casts
can help you to the right thing, but a spell. Let me do some thinking in the I
symmechromatic, thunderblender. (The exotics if I can shape them a little.) Dearborn might come into one. If the sketches should be returned at once, let me know. Otherwise, let me dwell on them for a time. I am, may I say, a trusty confidant. I thank you for realizing that under contract esprit could not flower. of the impeccable,
direction
You owe me
.
.
.
nothing, specific or moral. Sincerely yours,
Marianne Moore
Some
other suggestions, Mr. Young, for the phenomenon:
THE RESILIENT BULLET or intelligent bullet or bullet cloisonne
have always had a fancy
(I
the
or bullet lavolta
little first
for
THE INTELLIGENT WHALE—
Navy submarine, shaped
like a sweet-potato;
on view
in
our
Brooklyn Yard).
THE FORD FABERGE seems
to
me
to
(that there
do no harm here,
is
also a
perfume
FABERGE
allusion to the original silversmith).
THE ARC-en-CIEL (the rainbow)
ARCENCIEL? Please do not feel that memoranda from me need acknowledgment.
I
am
not working day and night for you;
I
feel that
etymological hits are
partially accidental.
Sincerely yours,
Marianne Moore
The
bullet idea has possibilities,
it
mercury (with Hermes and Hermes
seems
to
me,
trismegistus)
in
connection with
and magic (white
magic). I
seem
to
admire variety in the sections of your address!
Marianne Moore
71
November
28, 1955
Young From: Marianne Moore
TO: Mr. Robert
B.
MONGOOSE CIVIQUE ANTICIPATOR
REGNA RACER AEROTERRE
(couronne a couronne) sovereign to sovereign
fee rapide (aerofere, aero faire, fee aiglette, magifaire)
tonnere
alifere
comme
il
faire
(winged thunder)
aliforme alifere (wing-slender a-wing)
TURBOTORC (used as an adjective by Plymouth) THUNDERBIRD allie (Cousin Thunderbird) THUNDER CRESTER DEARBORN diamante MAGIGRAVURE PASTELOGRAM I
be returning the sketches very soon.
shall
M.M. December
6,
1955
Young From: Marianne Moore
TO: Mr. Robert
B.
astranaut
regina-rex
chaparral
taper acer
taper-racer
Varsity Stroke
tir
angelastro
cresta lark
a Tare (bull's eye)
triskelion (three legs running)
pluma piluma (hairfine, feather-foot) andante con moto (description of a good motor?) My findings thin, so I terminate them and am returning the sketches two pastels, two photos: from Mr. M. H. Lieblich.
—
Two
principles
I
have not been able
the peacock and topnotcher of speed.
elsewhere)
—
like
balanced so that If
I
pastime.
The
1.
The topknot
swivel-axis
it
leveled,
whatever the slant of the
Morgan
ship.
Anything so far has been not ponder appreciation, Mr. Young. That was embodied hit,
you
shall
have
it.
in the sketches.
MM. (over) I
of
(emphasized
the Captain's bed on the whale-ship Charles
stumble on a
Do
2.
to capture:
can not
resist
the temptation to disobey
my brother
and submit
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
72
TURCOTINGO
(turquoise cotinga
— the cotinga being
a solid in-
digo South American finch or sparrow) I
have a three-volume
treatise
on
flowers that might produce some-
thing but the impression given should certainly be unlabored.
M.M. December
8,
1955
Mr. Young:
May
Do
I
submit
UTOPIAN TURTLETOP?
not trouble to answer unless you
like
it.
Marianne Moore The Ford Motor Company's response to this final suggestion was a floral tribute composed of twenty-four roses and white pine and spiral eucalyptus. The accompanying florist's Christmas card bore the greeting: TO OUR FAVORITE TURTLETOPPER
December
26, 1955
Dear Mr. Young:
An straight
aspiring turtle
from the
close inspection.
is
certain to glory in spiral eucalyptus, white pine
and innumerable scarlet roses almost too tall for temperament susceptible to shock though one may
forest,
Of a
be, to be treated like royalty could not but induce sensations unprece-
dently august. Please
know
that a carfancyer's allegiance to the Ford automotive
— extending from the Model T Dynasty the Young Utopian Dynasty — can never waver; impersonal gratitude surely becoming to
turtle
infi-
nite
when made
personal. Gratitude to unmiserly Mr.
Young and
his
idealistic associates.
Marianne Moore January
17,
1956
Dear Miss Moore: Please excuse
my
long delay in responding to your generous notes.
Our label is still in a state of indecision. Contributions have been entered from many directions, and those from our "favorite turtletopper" rate among the most interesting of all.
We
can scarcely begin to thank you for your interest and munificent help in our dilemma. The art of precise word picking is rarely joined with the mechanical genius of our automotive personnel. Your aid in this respect
has been invaluable.
Marianne Moore
73
hope you are entering another happy and healthy new year. Wishing you the best of everything. I remain your faithful Utopian. I
Robert B. Young
Marketing Research
November
8,
1956
Dear Miss Moore: Because you were so kind to us in our early and hopeful days of looking for a suitable name, I feel a deep obligation to report on events that have ensued.
And
I
feel
I
must do so before the public announcement of same
come Monday, November 19. We have chosen a name candidates that we gathered. It
out of the more than six-thousand-odd has a certain ring to
it.
An
air
of gaiety
and zest. At least, that's what we keep saying. Our name, dear Miss Moore, is Edsel. I know you will share your sympathies with us.
—
Cordially,
David Wallace, Manager Marketing Research
Our Mr. Robert Young, who corresponded with you earlier, is now and temporarily, we hope, in the service of our glorious U.S. Coast P.S.
Guard. I
know he would send
his best.
DW November Dear Mr. Wallace: I thank you for the
You have
the certainly ideal thing
nously symbolized.
phenomena.) At pany's choice
wish the
—
letter just received
(I
all
am
a
from you, of November
— with the Ford
piqued that
I
1956
8th.
identity indige-
concentrated on physical
you for informing me of the Comof keen interest. Am quite partisan. I do
events, thank
a matter to
Company
little
11,
me
designs to "lead." Sincerely yours,
Marianne Moore Mr. Young
is
possessed of esprit and
I
hope
is
thriving.
Robert Benchley *
OPERA SYNOPSES SOME SAMPLE OUTLINES OF GRAND OPERA PLOTS FOR HOME STUDY
I
DIE MEISTER-GENOSSENSCHAFT SCENE: The Forests of Germany. TIME: Antiquity.
Cast Strudel, God of Rain SCHMALZ, God of Slight Drizzle Immergluck, Goddess of the Six Primary Colors LuDWiG DAS EiWEisS, the Knight of the Iron Duck
Baritone
The Woodpecker
Soprano
Basso
Tenor Soprano
Argument The basis of "Die Meister-Genossenschaft" is an many which tells how the Whale got his Stomach. Act
old legend of Ger-
1
—
The Rhine at Low Tide Just Below Weldschnoffen. Immergluck has grown weary of always sitting on the same rock with the same fishes swimming by every day, and sends for Schwiil to suggest something to do. Schwiil asks her how she would like to have pass before her all the wonders of the world fashioned by the hand of man. She says, rotten.
He
then suggests that Ringblattz, son of Pflucht, be
made
to appear
before her and fight a mortal combat with the Iron Duck. This pleases
Immergluck and she summons
to her the four dwarfs:
Hot Water, Cold
Robert Benchley
75
Water, Cool, and Cloudy. She bids them bring Ringblattz to her. They refuse, alive
one time rescued them from being buried rage, Immergliick strikes them all dead with a
because Pflucht has
by acorns, and, in a
at
thunderbolt.
Act
A Mountain
Pass.
2
— Repenting of her deed, Immergliick has sought
advice of the giants, Offen and Besitz, and they
procure the magic zither which confers upon
tell
her that she must
owner the power to go to sleep while apparently carrying on a conversation. This magic zither has been hidden for three hundred centuries in an old bureau drawer, guarded by the Iron Duck, and, although many have attempted to rescue it, all have died of a strange ailment just as success was within their its
grasp.
But Immergliick calls to her side Dampfboot, the tinsmith of the gods, and bids him make for her a tarnhelm or invisible cap which will enable her to talk to people without their understanding a word she says. For a dollar and a half extra Dampfboot throws in a magic ring which renders
its
Walhalla,
wearer insensible. Thus armed, Immergliick
humming
starts
out for
to herself.
Act
3
—
The Forest Before the Iron Duck's Bureau Drawer. Merglitz, who has up till this time held his peace, now descends from a balloon and demands the release of Betty. It has been the will of Wotan that Merglitz and Betty should meet on earth and hate each other like poison, but Zweiback, the druggist of the gods, has disobeyed and concocted a lovepotion which has rendered the young couple very unpleasant company. Wotan, enraged, destroys them with a protracted heat spell. Encouraged by this sudden turn of affairs, Immergliick comes to earth in a boat drawn by four white Holsteins, and, seated alone on a rock, remembers aloud to herself the days when she was a girl. Pilgrims from Augenblick, on their way to worship at the shrine of Schmiirr, hear the sound of reminiscence coming from the rock and stop in their march to sing a hymn of praise for the drying-up of the crops. They do not recognize Immergliick, as she has her hair done differently, and think that she
is
a beggar girl selling pencils.
In the meantime, Ragel, the papercutter of the gods, has fashioned
himself a sword on the forge of Schmalz, and has called the weapon
"Assistance-in-Emergency."
Armed
with "Assistance-in-Emergency" he
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
76
comes
to earth,
determined to
slay the Iron
Duck and
carry off the
beautiful Irma.
But Frimsel overhears the plan and has a drink brewed which is given to Ragel in a golden goblet and which, when drunk, makes him
and causes him to believe that he is Schnorr, the God of Fun. While laboring under this spell, Ragel has a funeral pyre built on the summit of a high mountain and, after lighting it, climbs on top of it with a mandolin which he plays until he is consumed. forget his past
Immergliick never marries.
II
IL
MINNESTRONE
(PEASANT LOVE) Scene: Venice and Old Point Comfort. Time: Early i6th Century.
Cast Alfonso, Duke of Minnestrone Partola, a Peasant Girl
Cleanso Turing
Baritone
Soprano Tenor Tenor
Young Noblemen of Venice
BOMBO
Basso
LUDOVICO ASTOLFO
J Basso [ Methodist
Assassins in the Service of Cafeteria Rusticana
Townspeople, Cabbies and Sparrows
Argument Minnestrone"
"II
an allegory of the two
is
(good and bad), ending at
last in
sides of a
man's nature
an awfully comical mess with everyone
dead.
Act
A
Public Square, Ferrara.
1
— During
a peasant festival held to cele-
brate the sixth consecutive day of rain, Rudolpho, a
young nobleman,
sees Lilliano, daughter of the village bell-ringer, dancing along throwing artificial is,
and
roses at herself.
He
asks of his secretary
his secretary, in order to
who
the young
woman
confuse Rudolpho and thereby win the
Robert Benchley
hand of
his ward, tells
guised for the
festival.
him that Rudolpho
his (Rudolpho's)
it is
astounded.
is
Act Banquet Hall
Gorgios Palace.
in
77
He
own mother,
dis-
orders her arrest.
2
—
Lilliano has not forgotten Breda,
her old nurse, in spite of her troubles, and determines to avenge herself for the
many
insults she received in her
youth by poisoning her (Breda).
She therefore invites the old nurse to a banquet and poisons her. Presently a knock is heard. It is Ugolfo. He has come to carry away the body of Michelo and to leave an extra quart of pasteurized. Lilliano tells him that she no longer loves him, at which he goes away, dragging his feet sulkily.
Act ofEmilos House.
In Front
—
3
Still
thinking of the old man's curse,
Borsa has an interview with Cleanso, believing him to be the Duke's wife.
He
tells
Just at this
him
things can't go
moment
Betty
on
and Cleanso stabs him. from school and falls in a She has been insulted by
as they are,
comes rushing
in
Her worst fears have been realized. Sigmundo, and presently dies of old age. In a fury, Ugolfo rushes out to kill Sigmundo and, as he does so, the dying Rosenblatt rises on one elbow faint.
and curses
his
mother.
Ill
LUCY DE LIMA Scene: Wales. Time: 1700 (Greenwich).
Cast William Wont, Lord ofGlennnn Lucy Wagstaff, his daughter Bertram, her lover Lord Roger, friend of Bertram Irma, attendant to Lucy Friends, Retainers, and Members of the
Basso
Soprano
Tenor Soprano Basso local
Lodge of Elks.
Argument "Lucy de Lima is founded on the well-known of the same name and address. "
story by Boccaccio
George
MEN PLAYED CARDS
IF
AS
The scene
is
Kaufman
S.
home
John's
WOMEN DO
— the
living room. There are
two doors, one
A
leading to an outside hall, the other to the other rooms of the house.
up
card table has been set
around
it,
and above
adjuncts for a poker
humidor. For the
it is
middle of the room, with four chairs another table on which are piled the necessary
game
rest,
in the
— a fancy cover
you have only
to
for the table, cards, chips, a
imagine an average and good-
looking room.
As the curtain calls
John
rises,
enters from another room, then turns
and
back through the open door, as though he had forgotten something.
Impertinence from the Author:
It is
perhaps unnecessary to
re-
mark that the sketch derives its entire value from the fact that it is played in forthright and manly fashion. In other words, the actors must not imitate the voices of women. John:
And
don't forget,
I
want things served very
china and the fiHgree
doilies.
bers another instruction.)
And
{He at
Use the best door remem-
nicely.
starts to close the
—
eleven o'clock just put the cigars
and drinks right on the table and we'll stop playing. {He closes the door and advances into the room. He looks the place over; rubs a suspecting finger along the table top in a quest for dust. He moves one chair a fraction of an inch and seems to think that that makes a difference in the appearance of the room. Then there comes a knock on the outer door. John darts to the mirror and takes a quick look at himself, adjusts his tie.) Come in! (Bob enters.) Hello, Bob! Bob: Hello, John! I thought I'd run over early to see if I could help you with the lunch.
George
Kaufman
S.
— everything ready. new Bob: Why, no — don't you remember? John: Thanks
is
hat, isn't
Spring.
myself, get
him
it
baked a cake. Oh,
I
say! That's a
it?
It's
the one
I
got at Knox's in the
Then when they began wearing the bands higher, I why should I buy a new hat when I can have a man to put
you like it? John: Very attractive. to try
79
on another band I
wonder how
it
me,
for
in
just as easily as not?
would look on me? {Takes
on, then smooths his hair before he finally puts
looks at himself in the mirror; turns.)
said to
What do you
it;
it
and
Do
starts
on.
He
think?
Bob: Lovely! Makes your face look thinner. {Looks at the card table.)
Who's playing tonight? John: George and Marc. Bob: Really? {He takes his seat.) Tell looking older these days?
How
me
— don't you
think George
is
and Ethel getting along? Any
are he
better?
John: Not as good.
Funny what she saw in him. John: Come in! (George enters.) Bob:
George: {Greatly
{There
is
a knock
on the
door.)
surprised, as though they were the last people he
had
expected to see) Hello, boys!
John: Hello, George! Well, well, well!
Bob: {Rises) Hello, George! Never saw you look so young!
George:
{In great excitement) Say,
street
and what do you think?
Will Harper's wife
Bob:
You
may
met Ed Jennings down the He says Jim Perkins told him that I
just
leave him!
don't say so! {Sits again.)
George: What do you think of that? {His excitement dies a little; he looks around.) The room looks lovely, John. You've changed things around, haven't you? Awfully nice. But if you don't mind just a I'm not sure that I like that table up there where little suggestion you've got it. {Another critical look.) And if you had these chairs re-
—
upholstered in blue John: Well, what do you think of a plain chintz?
George: That would be nice. Oh, say! I've got a T.L. for you. Bob. Bob: Oh, good! What is it? George: Well, you owe me one first. Bob: Oh, tell me mine! Don't be mean! George: Well, all right. Frank Williams said you looked lovely in your dinner coat. Bob: That
is
nice.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
8o
John: How's the baby, George?
George: Awfully cranky tonight
Who
—
else
chance coming?
first is
He's teething.
lately.
had
I've
I
left
him with the nurse
to get out. {Takes a seat at the table.)
John: Just Marc.
George: (With meaning) Oh, Marc. Don't you think
is
he's
woman lately? He certainly has. He was
Bob:
yesterday
—
I
know because
want to speak to you boys about been seeing a lot of that Fleming
he?
I
at the Biltmore,
a cousin of
Which cousin is that? Bob: I don't know whether you know him John:
—
Tom
having tea with her Hennessey's saw him.
— Ralph Wilson.
Akron girl they have two children. George: You remember one of them is backward. John: Oh, yes! I heard that. {Another knock on the door.) that
He
married
—
Come in! (Marc
enters.)
MarC: Hello, everybody! George, John and Bob: Hello, Marc! Marc: I'm sorry to be the last, but we have what that means. John: That's
all right.
Don't you
Say,
I
like
a
new maid, and you know
the cut of that vest, Marc. Look, boys!
like that vest?
MarC: It is nice, isn't it? George: Oh, lovely! Turn around and let's see the back. (George and John both get up and examine his clothes, pull down his trousers, etc.)
—
had it made right in the house I have a little tailor that comes in. Four dollars a day. George: Excuse me there's a little spot {He moistens a finger and rubs Marc's lapel.)
Marc:
I
—
John: Well, shall
Marc:
we
play a
{Sitting) Yes, sure.
little
poker?
Oh, John, may
I
trouble you for a glass of
water?
Why, of course. Marc. (George and Bob sit again.) Marc: I'll get it myself if you'll tell me where that's all right. {He goes out. A pause. The men look at John: Oh, no each other, meaningfully. Their heads come together.) MarC: John doesn't look well, does he? Bob: No. Did you notice those lines? He can't hide them much longer. Marc: He was very good-looking as a boy. George: Isn't this room the most terrible thing you ever saw? John:
—
George
(Marc the others.
They
cents. {Pause.)
(Marc
it
to
really
wanted
to get that
water myself.
(John re-enters with the water.) Oh,
drinks.)
cold enough, Marc?
Marc: {Indicating in,
I
like to see his kitchen.
Is it
81
are scornful.)
thanks, John.
John:
Kaufman
goes to the table up stage; picks up a cigar and shows
MarC: Huh! Ten I'd
S.
that
it
Oh,
isnt)
Of
yes.
course,
I
generally put ice
myself. {Sits.)
George: Say, we had the loveliest new dessert tonight! Bob: Oh! What was it? It's awfully hard to find a new dessert. Marc: {With emphasis) Is it? George: Well, it was a sort of prune whip. You make it out of just nothing at all. And then, if company comes when you don't expect them Bob: I want the recipe. Marc: How many eggs? (John up at the John: Does
it
take
George: Oh, no
rear table.
much
— very
Turns on
this speech.)
butter? little.
I'll
bring you the recipe Tuesday after-
noon.
(Marc
feels a
rough place on his chin. Rubs
it,
then takes a good-
and stands it on the table. Examines his chin. Then takes out a safety razor and starts to shave. After that he takes out two military brushes and combs his hair. The others pay no attention to this. John is at the rear table, with his back to the audience; Bob is sized mirror out of his pocket
George
seated, fooling with the cards;
Marc
has put everything away.
Bob: Are
we
Bob
is
seated, calmly smoking. After
breaks the silence.)
ready?
down the fancy table which he spreads on the table.) There we are! MarC: {Feeling it) That's nice, John. Where 'd you get it? John: Why, I bought a yard of this plain sateen down at Macy's George: Really? How much was it? John: A dollar sixty-three. It was reduced. Then I had this edging John: No! Wait just a minute. {He brings
house.
Bob: Awfully nice!
Marc: Oh, say! Walter Sharp George: He did?
just got
back from Paris
cover,
in the
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
82
Marc: Yes. And he says they're wearing trousers longer over there. George: Really? {There is quite a fuss about it.) John: (Brings chips and takes his seat) What'll we play for? Bob: Oh, what's the difference? One cent limit? George: Does it matter who deals? {Takes the cards from Bob.) MarC: Say, did you hear about Eddie Parker? John: No.
seems he saw these advertisements about how to get thin, and he thought he'd try them. You know Eddie's taken on a lot of
Marc: Well,
it
weight since his marriage.
—
George: Twenty pounds absolutely. Marc: Well, they sent him some powders and he began taking them, and what do you think? George: Well? (Marc whispers to him.) You don't say so? John and Bob: (Excited) What was it? What was it? (George whispers to John, who whispers to Bob. Great excitement.) MarC: Who has the cards? George: Here they are. (Starts to deal poker hands.) MarC: I don't want to play late. I've been shopping all day. George: And I have an appointment at the barber's tomorrow. I'm going to try a new way of getting my hair cut. (The deal is completed.) Bob: (Picking up a few cards) Which is higher aces or kings? George: Now, who bets first?
—
—
John: Are these funny
MarC: What
little
are the chips worth?
John: Let's have them
Bob:
things clubs?
a penny
apiece.
worth the same thing.
all .
.
.
George: Say, Lord & Taylor are having Marc: What do you pay your maid? Bob: Sixty-five, but she
isn't
worth
it.
a wonderful sale of nightgowns!
(The three start talking at once
about maids, and John has a hard time being heard.) John: (Excited) Boys! Boys! Listen to
this!
Boys!
All: Well?
John: (Excited)
knew there was something
I
All: (They must not speak together)
John: Well,
now
word of
it
promised
George: What Marc: Well? Bob: Well?
to I
in the first place
anybody, because
wouldn't
is it?
tell.
What
I
wanted
to
tell
is it?
you must promise not I
got
you!
it
in absolute
to breathe a
confidence and
I
George John:
It's
let
S.
Kaufman
about Sid Heflin! Now, you won't
on you got
it
tell
83
anybody? At
least,
from me!
All: No!
— and going — ah
John: Well, I'm told that he's
Marc:
I
I
to
don't believe
don't
got this pretty straight,
mind you
— I'm
[He puts the message across with
told
his eyes.)
it!
What do you mean? George: When? Bob:
John: In April!
MarC: April! (They count on their fingers, up to four.) George: What do you mean? John: Exactly! They were married late in January! {They their hands and begin talking at once.) curtain
all
throw
down
Groucho Marx LETTERS TO WARNER BROTHERS
When
the
Marx Brothers were about
to
make
a
movie called "A Night
in Casablanca," there were threats of legal action from the
Brothers, who, five years before,
''Casablanca" (with
had made a picture
Humphrey Bogart and
Whereupon Groucho, speaking
Warner
called, simply,
Bergman as stars). and himself, imme-
Ingrid
for his brothers
diately dispatched the following letters:
Dear Warner Brothers: more than one way of conquering a city and holding it as your own. For example, up to the time that we contemplated making this picture, I had no idea that the city of Casablanca belonged exclusively to Warner Brothers. However, it was only a few days after our announcement appeared that we received your long, ominous legal document warning us not to use the name Casablanca. Apparently there
is
Ferdinand Balboa Warner, your great-greatgrandfather, while looking for a shortcut to the city of Burbank, had stumbled on the shores of Africa and, raising his alpenstock (which he
seems that
It
later
in 1471,
turned in for a hundred shares of the common),
named
it
Casa-
blanca.
understand your attitude. Even
you plan on re-releasing your picture, I am sure that the average movie fan could learn in time to distinguish between Ingrid Bergman and Harpo. I don't know whether I could, but I certainly would like to try. You claim you own Casablanca and that no one else can use that name without your permission. What about "Warner Brothers "? Do you own that, too? You probably have the right to use the name Warner, but what about Brothers? Professionally, we were brothers long before you I
just don't
if
Groucho Marx were.
was
We were touring the sticks gleam
as
85
The Marx
Brothers
when Vitaphone
and even before us there had been other brothers the Smith Brothers; the Brothers Karamazov; Dan Brothers, an outfielder with Detroit; and "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?" (This was originally "Brothers, Can You Spare a Dime?" but this was spreading a dime pretty thin, so they threw out one brother, gave all the money to the other one and whittled it down to, "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?") still
a
in the inventor's eye,
—
Now
Jack,
name? Well,
how about you? Do you maintain
that yours
is
an
origi-
was used long before you were born. Offhand, I can think of two Jacks there was Jack of "Jack and the Beanstalk," and Jack the Ripper, who cut quite a figure in his day. nal
it's
not.
It
—
As for you, Harry, you probably sign your checks, sure in the belief that you are the first Harry of all time and that all other Harrys are imposters. I can think of two Harrys that preceded you. There was Lighthouse Harry of Revolutionary fame and a Harry Appelbaum who lived on the corner of 93rd Street and Lexington Avenue. Unfortunately, Appelbaum wasn't too well known. The last I heard of him, he was selling neckties at Weber and Heilbroner. Now about the Burbank studio. I believe this is what you brothers call your place. Old man Burbank is gone. Perhaps you remember him. He was a great man in a garden. His wife often said Luther had ten green thumbs. What a witty woman she must have been! Burbank was the wizard who crossed all those fruits and vegetables until he had the poor plants in such a confused and jittery condition that they could never decide whether to enter the dining room on the meat platter or the dessert dish.
This
is
pure conjecture, of course, but
— perhaps Bur-
who knows
bank's survivors aren't too happy with the fact that a plant that grinds
out pictures on a quota settled in their town, appropriated Burbank's
name and
uses
it
Burbank family
is
even possible that the prouder of the potato produced by the old man than
as a front for their films.
It is
they are of the fact that from your studio emerged "Casablanca" or even
"Gold Diggers of 1931." seems to add up to a pretty bitter tirade, but I assure you it's not meant to. I love Warners. Some of my best friends are Warner Brothers. It is even possible that I am doing you an injustice and that This
all
you, yourselves, tude.
It
know nothing
wouldn't surprise
me
at all
about
this
dog-in-the-Wanger
at all to discover that
legal
department are unaware of this absurd dispute,
with
many
of
them and they
atti-
the heads of your
for
I
am
acquainted
are fine fellows with curly black hair, dou-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
86
ble-breasted suits and a love of their fellow
man
that out-Saroyans Sa-
royan. I
is
have a hunch that
the brainchild of
some
this
attempt to prevent us from using the
title
ferret-faced shyster, serving a brief apprentice-
ship in your legal department.
know
I
the type well
— hot out of law
school, hungry for success and too ambitious to follow the natural laws
of promotion. This bar sinister probably needled your attorneys, most of
whom
are fine fellows with curly black hair, double-breasted suits, etc.,
into attempting to enjoin us. Well,
him
to the highest court!
No
he won't get away with
pasty-faced legal adventurer
cause bad blood between the Warners and the Marxes.
under the skin and we'll remain friends till the Casablanca" goes tumbling over the spool.
ers
in
We
We'll fight
it!
are
last reel
going to
is
broth-
all
of "A Night
Sincerely,
Groucho Marx For some curious reason,
Warner Brothers legal department. They wrote in all seriousness and asked if the Marxes could give them some idea of what their story was about. They felt that something might be worked out. So Groucho replied: this letter
seemed
—
to puzzle the
—
Dear Warners: There
isn't
who
of Divinity
much I can
tell
you about the
story. In
it I
play a Doctor
ministers to the natives and, as a sideline, hawks can
openers and pea jackets to the savages along the Gold Coast of Africa.
When to barflies
caddie
who
I
first
who
meet Chico, he
is
working in a saloon,
are unable to carry their liquor.
lives in a
Harpo
selling is
sponges
an Arabian
small Grecian urn on the outskirts of the
city.
As the picture opens. Porridge, a mealy-mouthed native sharpening some arrows for the hunt. Paul Hangover, our hero, stantly lighting
two cigarettes simultaneously.
He
apparently
is
girl, is
is
con-
unaware
of the cigarette shortage.
There are many scenes of splendor and fierce antagonisms, and Color, an Abyssinian messenger boy, runs Riot. Riot, in case you have never been there, is a small night club on the edge of town. There's a lot more I could tell you, but I don't want to spoil it for you. All this has been okayed by the Hays Office, Good Housekeeping and the survivors of the Haymarket Riots; and if the times are ripe, this picture can be the opening gun in a new worldwide disaster. Cordially,
Groucho Marx
Groucho Marx
87
Instead of mollifying them, this note seemed to puzzle the attorneys
even more; they wrote back and said they
still
didn't understand the
and they would appreciate it if Mr. Marx would explain in more detail. So Groucho obliged with the following:
story line
the plot
Dear Brothers: Since in the plot
version
I
I
last
wrote you,
of our
new
I
regret to say there
picture,
"A Night
play Bordello, the sweetheart of
in
have been some changes
Casablanca." In the
Humphrey
Bogart.
new
Harpo and
Chico are itinerant rug peddlers who are weary of laying rugs and enter a monastery just for a lark. This is a good joke on them, as there hasn't been a lark in the place for fifteen years. Across from this monastery, hard by a jetty, is a waterfront hotel, chockfull of apple-cheeked damsels, most of whom have been barred by the Hays Office for soliciting. In the fifth reel, Gladstone makes a speech that sets the House of Commons in a uproar and the King promptly asks for his resignation. Harpo marries a hotel detective; Chico operates an ostrich farm.
Humphrey
Bogart's
girl.
Bordello, spends her last years in
a Bacall house.
This, as you can see,
is
can save us from extinction
is
a very skimpy outline.
The
only thing that
a continuation of the film shortage.
Fondly,
Groucho Marx After that, the Marxes heard no more from the Warner Brothers legal
department.
TO
GUMMO MARX June, 1964
Dear Gummo: Eden and I had dinner with my celebrated pen pal, T.S. Eliot. It was a memorable evening. The poet met us at the door with Mrs. Eliot, a good-looking, midLast night
up with adoration every time she looked at her husband. He, by the way, is tall, lean and rather stooped over; but whether this is from age, illness or both, I don't know.
dle-aged blonde whose eyes seemed to
At any for a literary
your correspondent arrived at the Eliots' fully prepared evening. During the week I had read "Murder in the Cathe-
rate,
"The Waste Land" three times; and just bottleneck, I brushed up on "King Lear."
dral" twice; sational
fill
in case of a conver-
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
88
Well,
sir,
the kind that
were served, there was a momentary
as cocktails
is
more
or less inevitable
when
meet
strangers
time. So, apropos of practically nothing (and "not with a
whimper") thought,
I
will
I've
for the
first
bang but a
"The Waste Land." That,
tossed in a quotation from
show him
lull
read a thing or two besides
my
I
press notices
from vaudeville.
—
though to say he was thoroughly familiar with his poems and didn't need me to recite them. So I took a whack at "King Lear." I said the king was an incredibly foolish old man, which God knows he was; and that if he'd been my father I would have run away from home at the age of eight instead of waiting until I was Eliot smiled faintly
as
—
ten.
That, too, failed to bowl over the poet.
He seemed more
interested
"Animal Crackers" and "A Night at the Opera." He quoted a joke one of mine that I had long since forgotten. Now it was my turn to smile faintly. I was not going to let anyone not even the British poet from St. Louis spoil my Literary Evening. I pointed out that King Lear's opening speech was the height of idiocy. Imagine (I said) a father asking his three children: Which of you kids loves me the most? And then disowning the youngest the sweet, honest Cordelia because, unlike her wicked sister, she couldn't bring herself to gush out insincere flattery. And Cordelia, mind you, had been her father's favorite! The Eliots listened politely. Mrs. Eliot then defended Shakespeare; and Eden, too, I regret to say, was on King Lear's side, even though I am the one who supports her. (In all fairness to my wife, I must say that, having played the Princess in a high school production of "The Swan," in discussing
—
— —
—
—
she has retained a rather
As
for Eliot,
warm
he asked
"Duck Soup." Fortunately
I'd
—
feeling for
if I
all
royalty.)
remembered the courtroom scene
forgotten every word.
It
in
was obviously the
end of the Literary Evening, but very pleasant none the less. I discovered that Eliot and I had three things in common: (i) an affection for good cigars and (2) cats; and (3) a weakness for making puns a weakness that for many years I have tried to overcome. T.S., on the other hand, is an unashamed even proud punster. For example, there's his Gus, the Theater Cat, whose "real name was Asparagus." Speaking of asparagus, the dinner included good, solid English beef, very well prepared. And, although they had a semi-butler serving, Eliot insisted on pouring the wine himself. It was an excellent wine and no maitre d' could have served it more graciously. He is a dear man and
—
—
a
charming
When
—
host. I
told
him
that
my daughter Melinda was
studying his poetry
Groucho Marx at
89
Beverly High, he said he regretted that, because he had no wish to
become compulsory
We
reading.
didn't stay late, for
evening of conversation
we both
felt
that
he wasn't up
to a long
— especially mine. —
Did I tell you we called him Tom? possibly because that's his name. I, of course, asked him to call me Tom too, but only because I loathe the
name
Julius.
Yours,
Tom Marx
Frank Sullivan THE CLICHE EXPERT TESTIFIES ON LOVE
Q — Mr.
Arbuthnot, as an expert in the use of the cliche, are you pre-
pared to
here today regarding
its
application in topics of sex,
matrimony, and so on?
love,
A— I
testify
am.
Q — Very good. A— Love
is
love?
blind.
is
Q — Good.
Now, Mr. Arbuthnot, what
What does
love do?
A — Love
makes the world go round. Whom does a young man fall in love with? With the Only Girl in the World. Whom does a young woman fall in love with? With the Only Boy in the World. When do they fall in love?
Q—
A—
Q—
A—
Q—
A — At
first sight.
Q— How?
A — Madly.
Q—They are then said to be? A — Victims
of Cupid's darts.
Q— And he?
A — Whispers sweet nothings in Q— Who loves a lover? A — All the world loves a lover.
her
ear.
Q— Describe the Only Girl in the World. A — Her
Q—
Her teeth are like pearls. Her damask, and her form divine.
eyes are like
stars.
lips
Her cheek is Haven't you forgotten something?
A — Eyes,
teeth, lips, cheek,
form
— no,
sir, I
don't think so.
are ruby.
Frank Sullivan
91
Q— Her hair?
A—Oh,
Q— Very A—
How stupid
certainly.
of me. She has hair
Mr. Arbuthnot.
good,
Man? He is a blond
Now
like
spun
you describe the Only
will
Viking, a he-man, and a square shooter
game. There
is
something
fine
who
plays the
about him that rings true, and he
has kept himself pure and clean so that his choice, the future
gold.
mother of
when he meets
his children,
girl
of
he can look her
in
the
the eye.
Q_How?
A — Without flinching. Q —Are all the Only Men blond A — Oh, no. Some of them are their wild oats. This sort
there fast
He his
is
handsome chaps who have sown of Only Man has a way with a maid, and
a devil in his eye.
and loose with an Only
dark,
But he
is
not a cad; he would not play
Girl's affections.
He
has a heart of gold.
diamond in the rough. He tells the Only and forgives. Past. She understands is
a
Girl frankly about
—
Q —And marries him? A — And
Vikings?
marries him.
Q_Why? A— To reform him.
Q— Does she reform him? A — Seldom.
Q— Seldom what?
A— Seldom,
if
ever.
Q— Now,
Mr. Arbuthnot, when the Only the Only Girl, what does he do?
Man
falls in
— He walks on Q —Yes, know, but what does he do? mean, what A— Oh, excuse me. The question, of course. Q — Then what do they A — Their Q— What happens A — They married. Q— What marriage? A — Marriage Q— Where are marriages made? A— Marriages are made Heaven. Q— What does the bride do the wedding? A — She blushes. A
love, madly, with
air.
I
I
plight?
troth.
after that?
get is
is
a lottery.
in
at
is it
he pops?
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
92
Q— What does the groom do? A — Forgets the ring. A — After the marriage, A — The honeymoon.
what?
Q —Then what? A — She
has a
secret.
little
Q_What is it? A — She
is
A — Oh,
they settle
knitting a tiny garment.
Q— What happens after that? down and
raise a family
and
live
happily ever after-
ward, unless
Q — Unless what? A — Unless
he
is
a fool for a pretty face.
Q— And if he is? A — Then
Q — Mr.
A— But
they
come
to the parting of the ways.
Arbuthnot, thank you very much. I'm not through yet, Mr. Untermyer.
Q— No?
A — Oh,
no. There
is
another side to
sex.
Q — There is? What side? A — The seamy
There are, you know, men who are wolves sheep's clothing and there are, alas, lovely women who stoop side.
in
to
folly.
Q— My goodness! A—
men you speak of, please. They are snakes in the grass who do not place woman upon a pedestal. They are cads who kiss and tell, who trifle with a girl's affections and betray her innocent trust. They are cynics who think that a woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke. Their Describe these
mottoes are "Love 'em and leave 'em" and "Catch 'em young, treat
'em rough,
tell
'em nothing." These cads speak of "the
—
—
light that
woman's eyes, and lies and lies and lies." In olden days they wore black, curling mustachios, which they twirled, and they invited innocent Gibson girls to midnight suppers, with champagne, at their bachelor apartments, and said, "Little girl, why do you fear me?" Nowadays they have black, patent-leather hair, and roadsters, and they drive up to the curb and say, "Girlie, can I give you a lift?" They are fiends in human form, who would rob a woman of her most priceless possession. lies in
Q— What
is
that?
A— Her honor, Q — How do they
rob her?
Frank Sullivan
A — By making
93
improper advances.
Q— What does a woman do when a snake in the grass tries to rob her of her honor?
A — She
defends her honor.
Q— How?
A — By repulsing his advances and Q — How does she do that? A — By saying, "Sir, believe you I
arm away,"
or
"I'll
"Let's not spoil
it
scorning his embraces. forget yourself," or "Please take your
kindly thank
you
to
remember
I'm a lady," or
all."
Q — Suppose she doesn't say any of those things?
A — In
that case, she takes the
first false
step.
Q— Where does the first false step take her? A — Down
the primrose path.
Q — What's the primrose path? A — It's
the easiest way.
Q— Where does A — To
a
life
Q — What
of shame. a
is
lead?
it
life
of shame?
—A of shame Q — Now, A
life
is
a fate
worse than death.
woman has stooped to folly, what does she do to Lothario who has robbed her of her most priceless posses-
after lovely
the gay sion?
A — She
devotes the best years of her
life
to him.
Q—Then what does he do? A — He
casts her off.
Q— How? A — Like
an old shoe.
A— She
goes to their love nest, then everything goes black before her,
Q—Then what does she do? her mind becomes a blank, she pulls a revolver, and gives the fiend in
human form something
Q—That
is
A — No
remember her
by.
called?
A — Avenging
Q— What
to
her honor.
is it
no
jury will
do
in
such a case?
jury will convict.
Q— Mr.
Arbuthnot, your explanation of the correct application of
the cliche in these matters has been most instructive, and that
all
of us cliche-users here
will
know
ah—
—
know
how to respond when sex when
exactly
hereafter when, during a conversation, sex
I
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
94
A—
I
think what you want to say
is
"When
sex rears
its
it?
Mr. Arbuthnot. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Untermyer.
Q_Thank you,
A—
ugly head,"
isn't
Morton
B.
J.
(Beachcomber)
THE INTRUSIONS OF CAPTAIN FOULENOUGH
AT DRAINWATER HOUSE Captain Foulenough,
who
made
at
his
appearance
is
causing so
lunchtime yesterday
residence of Colonel and Mrs.
The McGawkes were cheon was about entrance
to
much
disturbance in Scotland,
at
Drainwater House, the
McGawke.
entertaining a large house party, and lun-
be served when the hostess heard voices in the
hall.
She heard her butler say, "What name did you say, sir?" and then a loud voice replied, "A Foulenough by any name would smell as sweet. He droppeth as the gentle dew from Heaven. Go hence, my man, and tell them that their old Uncle Fred waits without. Say their Aunt Emma has returned from sea. Say that I am the little waif you found abandoned in a linen basket on the doorstep. Say anything you please." Mrs. McGawke then came to the great oaken door, and the captain flung his arms round her, crying, "My dear old godmother! Have you forgotten the old days?
The
Is
there anything to drink in this doss-house?"
colonel joined his wife and endeavoured to rescue her from
the embrace of the noisy intruder.
He
said, "If
you do not go
at
up the police. We have been warned about you." "For the honour of your old regiment give me a meal,"
once,
I
shall ring
said the
captain.
Then, picking up a bust of Joseph Chamberlain, he you give me on this? What am I bid?"
The
said, "What'll
colonel, edging the captain towards the doors, said, "Here's
five shillings."
"The
Gawke
bust's yours," replied
with a bow.
Foulenough, handing
it
to Mrs.
Mc-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
96
They watched him go down deep, thunderous voice, "Flossie
the drive, and as he went he sang in a
Is the Girl for
Me."
AT TINWHISTLE LODGE Captain Foulenough turned up yesterday evening at Tinwhistle Lodge, near Cailzie, where Lord Lochstock and Barrel was entertaining heavily for the shooting. The captain, with that candour which disdains subterfuge, swung up the drive in full view of the guests gathered on the lawn, crying, "Any empties?" Lady Lochstock and Barrel (before her marriage a Whussett) said haughtily:
"We have no
empties, whatever they
tradesmen's entrance
"No empties?"
at
may
be.
You
will find
the back."
replied
Foulenough.
"Not one," said Lord Lochstock and Barrel. "Any fulls, then?" asked the captain. "In other words the wherewithal to wet
the
my
— have you
tyrannous whistle?"
At a sign from the master of the house Foulenough was taken to the servants' quarters and refreshed.
IMPASSE
from welcome on Clackwhidden Moor at this season of the year. The shoot was entirely ruined yesterday by a mysterious horseman who cantered up and down in front of the butts, waving
The thud
a
of hoofs
is
far
sword and crying, "Don't hold your
men
recognized Captain Foulenough,
himself in the
Colonel fire.
fire!
Charge!"
who
has
One
made such
or two sportsa nuisance of
district.
Grampound shouted
to him, "I say!
You
are masking our
Can't you see you're in the way, there's a good fellow,
To which
I
mean.
"
the irrepressible captain replied, "Fear nothing. Follow
me. I will lead you against those birds. Don't cower in those trenches. Grouse don't bite. After them, boys!" And he raised himself in his stirrups and waved them on. "Take cover," he added, "when I blow two blasts on my bottle." So saying, he raised a pint bottle of stout to his lips and drank heartily. Nobody knows quite what to do about it all. •
•
•
London's Upper Thirty-seven, the cream of the haut monde, the life-above-stairs gang, are organizing a committee to concert measures
once and for all, of the Foulenough menace. Several dowagers and other hostesses complain that the
for the ending,
captain's
B.
J.
name
Morton
97
has crept into the accounts of their social activities which their
have sent to the gossip
secretaries
writers.
The
general opinion
the captain must be either a lunatic or a determined climber.
is
The
that
pros-
pect of his attendance at dances and dinners and cocktail parties during the coming season
much
most people to contemplate. As an instance of what is happening. Lady Cabstanleigh read the following at the first committee meeting. It was taken from "Lobelia's" column of chatter in the Evening Scream: is
too
for
Witty and intelligent Lady Cabstanleigh cocktail party for the Trowser girls,
The Bopples
trepid dashes to Scotland.
ing
and Mr.
who
''Dirt" Cobblestone, and,
are off
is
giving a send-off
on one of
will be there,
of course, the
their in-
and Lady Urghandsome and
popular Captain Foulenough.
append a few more extracts from various columns of social chatter, which have given great offence to Lady Cabstanleigh's committee, formed to combat Captain Foulenough's attempts to get into Society: I
It is
man
understood that the best
at the
hurst wedding will be Captain Foulenough, as "an old friend of the groom,
and of
all
Garkington-Thwack-
who
describes himself
other grooms."
When
informed of this news the groom, Mr. Ernest ("Stink") Garkington, said, "Yve never even heard of the chap." .
.
.
Among
Lady Vowpe enough.
He
those
for her
who
will bring parties to the
daughter Celery
will probably bring the
is
dance given by
the popular Captain Foul-
Kempton Park gang.
Captain Foulenough, whose address, according to him, is the Cavalry Club, calls every day for letters. He has been told that he is not a member, and has been asked not to call at the club. His invariable reply
is,
"I
have to come here to get
fault if everyone writes to
me
at this address.
my letters. It's not my When I marry Babs, it
will be different."
remark has thrown many hostesses into a frenzy. Nobody knows whether the Babs in question is: This
last
(a)
Mrs. Simeon Grout's daughter;
(b)
Lady Barger's
(c)
Sir
(d)
Lady Thistleburn's daughter;
niece;
Arthur Cutaway's widow;
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
98
Lady "Connie"
(e) (f)
(g)
Clatter's daughter;
The divorced Mrs. Rowdgett; The orphan Babs Watercress;
A barmaid
(h)
at
the Horse and Hounds;
(i)
One
(j)
Lady Nausea ("Babs") Bottledown.
Many
of the Farragut twins;
hostesses have decided to
employ detectives to scrutinize is hoped to keep Captain Foul-
on arrival. In this way it enough away from houses where he is neither known nor wanted. But this is a dangerous way of dealing with the menace, as is shown their guests
by the complaints of a Mr. Cowparsleigh,
who
has already been refused
admission to two houses, owing to his resemblance to the captain. fact of this
of
making people even more nervous, since none offend a banker's nephew of Mr. Cowparsleigh's
resemblance
them can
afford to
The
is
status.
News has at
just
Lady Drain's
come
in of the
cocktail party.
He
appearance of Captain Foulenough
is
said to
have entered by the trades-
men's entrance. Suspicions were aroused when he seized the arm of
Aurora Bagstone, and holding
it
to his lips, in the
up and down the scale, from wrist remarked afterwards, "One does like to know who is
player, kissed
it
manner of
a flute
to elbow.
Aurora
kissing one, after
all."
Meanwhile, Mr. Cowparsleigh had been flung down the Mrs. Woodle's house in Crabapple Mews, and has threatened his
uncle
call in
steps of to
make
her overdraft.
A COMEDY OF ERRORS
A ridiculous
scene marred Lady Hounde's party the other night. "All one
has to do," said the hostess, "to stop this ing with our social engagements
is
man Foulenough from
to search
interfer-
any suspect. The so-called
captain always carries a bottle of strong drink in his pocket."
The
arrival of the
unfortunate Mr. Augustus Cowparsleigh,
who
is
Foulenough 's double, was the signal for an outbreak of suspicion that you could have cut with a knife. Cowparsleigh's recent misadventures have, of course, made him very timid, and he entered Lady Hounde's room blushing and looking guilty. Lady Hounde pounced like a starving jaguar. "Have you a bottle on you?" she demanded sternly, while plunging her hand into his side pocket.
J.
"I didn't
Morton
B.
know we were supposed
99
to bring
our
own
drink," retorted
Cowparsleigh. I
know
replied the victim testily,
"why
"Don't quibble," roared the hostess, "where 's your bottle? you've got one."
you are as thirsty as all that," don't you get one of your own drinks?" Taken aback, the hostess faltered. "If
tus," she said.
The
And everybody
do believe
it's
room
to speak to
Augus-
really
freely.
only other odd incident occurred half an hour
Flaring crossed the "I
breathed
"I
later.
Boubou
Cowparsleigh as he was leaving.
hear you were mistaken for Captain Foulenough," she
said.
The
was a wicked wink, and Boubou was surprised to see him leave with a little box full of caviare sandwiches and a bottle in each pocket, and reply
without saying goodbye to anybody.
Ten minutes
later
she was amazed to see him again. She said,
"Where have you dumped the sandwiches and the booze?" Augustus Cowparsleigh flushed angrily.
Boubou pondered At
"I
think you're
all
mad
here," he said.
in silence.
7:15 the supply of drink failed
— an unknown occurrence
in that
was only then that Lady Hounde heard Boubou's story, and realized that the dreaded warrior had indeed slipped through her fingers. house.
It
•
•
•
Mr. Augustus Cowparsleigh, who has the misfortune to be Captain Foulenough's double, was refused admittance yesterday to the divorce reception given by Lady Doublecross to celebrate the divorce of her
daughter Goatie from Sir Stanley
Biskett.
In vain did poor Augustus
he show the monogram on his shirt. To make matters worse this mildest of men has been asked to resign from one of his clubs, because he came into the smoking room with his shirt outside his waistcoat, placed a funnel down the back of old General Dunderhead's neck, and poured Sir Raymond Funbelow's whisky down produce
his card. In vain did
the funnel.
MR. COWPARSLEIGH AND FLORA SCREAMING I
learn that the timid but worthy Mr. Augustus Cowparsleigh
is
on the
point of announcing his engagement to Flora, the lovely daughter of
Mrs. Screaming.
Or should
I
say,
"was on the point"?
Yesterday the fond suitor for the largest hand in Upper Beauclerque
Mews had
most exclusive of
arranged to meet his lady in the cocktail bar at that pigsties,
"Chez Nussbaum." She
arrived punctually
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
lOO
and seated herself on one of the red glass rockinghorses ranged round the bar. A moment later she was astounded to see her fiance in animated conversation with a Creature. If ever there was a hussy this was one. Approaching cautiously, Flora saw the man who had always been so courtly and so reserved with her pinch the Creature's ear and smack her cheek playfully. He called her "Carrots." Feeling as though she had been slogged over the head with a steel hammer the poor girl called feebly for brandy.
When
came
she
to,
Augustus was bending over her tenderly, and
saying repeatedly, "So sorry
was
I
late."
Coldly she pushed him away and rose to her
feet,
then she
left
the
premises in comparatively high dudgeon.
Mr. Cowparsleigh was dining quietly with Flora Screaming and her mother the other night, when their butler, Mason, uttered a loud cry in the kitchen. A moment or two later he brought in the fish, and Mrs.
Screaming was about to ask him what had happened when he suddenly executed a dance step and whipped off a wig, revealing the red hair of Foulenough. Tongue-tied, they shrank from him. He said, "Cowparsleigh, old soak, little
just
I
wanted
matter for me. Flora,
identity.
I
to
my
thank you
love,
However, as I see violence scarper." And he left the room.
Alfred.
in
of
person for settling that
not attempt to screen
will
I
am Foulenough, and proud
in
it.
We
my
came over with King
your lady mother's eye,
I
will
do a
MR. COWPARSLEIGH DEVISES A SCHEME
"There
is
only one way out of this," said poor Mr. Cowparsleigh to Flora
Screaming. "There
me from
guish
is
an
infallible sign
Captain Foulenough.
mark about the
size of a florin
"Very nice," said Flora about
on my
by which you can always
You
see, fortunately,
are in doubt about
sarcastically.
"And
I
am
supposed to go
my
me,
I
dear," said Mr. Cowparsleigh. "But will
—
the throat.
I
when you
need only take
and unbutton the top button of my shirt." "Splendid," sneered Flora. "Nobody would think it odd. And
collar
and
tie off,
the captain, he's quite capable of buying a
sticking tics."
birth-
chest."
"Remove your shirt, I suppose?" "Oh no. The birthmark is high up, near
know
have a
at parties asking to see people's chests?"
"Certainly not,
my
I
distin-
it
on.
Then we should have
if I
sham birthmark and
the pair of you behaving like luna-
J.
B.
Morton
AND CARRIES
IT
loi
OUT
Next day the Fauconbridge-Fauconbridge-Fauconbridges gave a little sherry-party, and asked Flora and her fiance to look in. Flora arrived late, and when she saw Mr. Cowparsleigh beaming at her with more than his customary gaiety, thankful to have forestalled his double, she at once suspected that he was the dreaded captain, and turned her back on him. Whereupon the well-meaning Augustus shouldered his way towards her, but was intercepted by a voluble lady, who could not understand why he was fiddling with his tie and collar so nervously. When he whipped off his collar and undid his shirt at the neck she uttered a scream. People crowded round, and above the din the voice of the hostess was heard bawling, "Mason, show Captain Foulenough to the door!" So Mr. Cowparsleigh 's little scheme miscarried.
THE CAPTAIN AT LARGE
A paragraph
in a local
paper informs
me
that:
Captain de Courcy Foulenough, the well known clubman, has succeeded, by using the names of prominent London hostesses, in obtaining credit at some of the more shady whelk stalls at Brighton.
imagine that the proprietors of the stalls can have had business dealings with any of these ladies, and it can only be
It is difficult to
assumed that they
are sufficiently impressed by the captains
manner
to believe that their bills will be settled by his rich friends.
Lady Cabstanleigh commented on this paragraph yesterday. She said, "I, for one, have no intention of standing him whelks." Mr. Cowparsleigh, who has received a bill for four dozen whelks, has sent the money, "Merely because I prefer to hush the matter up." Other well known people who have received bills are consulting their solicitors.
Mrs. Taswill-Fogstone has received
this letter:
Dear Madam, /
enclose a bill for whelks inkurred by a gent what
with a lady and eat three doz. bitween them.
you was his mother, so
I
enclose the
I
bill for the
was give
to
my
ere
understan
whelks they
other custumiers you are cortious enough to send to
come eat.
Any
stall will be
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
102
assuared the best intenteons of the house not counting credit and the sky being the limmitt.
A
post order by return will oblige.
Your obedien
sen^ant,
Ted Rigger. The unfortunate Mr. Cowparsleigh was dumbfounded when he looked found
in at Dibbler's
Club
in
Ryder Street
yesterday
for his letters,
and
this:
Dear
Sir,
—
I
bill for the
enclose as requested the
jamboree at
my
Wednesday. The breakages come rather heavy, but you will remember that Violet had words with Connie and threw a cup at
stall last
When the fun was over I found Aggie's hat under the counter, and am fon^arding it to you as I dont know her address. Vve slipped in Tom's outstanding account as you told me to, and am giving her.
Mabel and her
friend tick.
Hoping
this
is
all right.
Yrs. respectfully,
Alfred Birago.
as
"What monstrous nonsense he rang up his solicitors.
is
this?"
exclaimed poor Cowparsleigh
BEDSIDE reading
Captain of the Schooir The voice of the headmistress was ice-cold and as sharp as a
"So you dare to
criticize the
scimitar.
Joyce
hung
her head.
Then the Captain, a frank smile lighting up her young face, advanced and held out her hand. At this gesture of friendliness the whole school began to bawl its eyes out. As for Joyce, she took the proffered hand and drenched it
with her
tears.
The headmistress turned aside. She, too, was human. (From The Beastliest Girl at St. Bede's.)
James Thurber THE BREAKING UP OF THE WINSHIPS
The
trouble that broke up the
Gordon Winships seemed
me, at first, windowpane. Another day, a touch of to
problem as frost on a it would be gone. I was inclined to laugh it off, and, indeed, as a friend of both Gordon and Marcia, I spent a great deal of time with each of them, separately, trying to get them to laugh it off, too with him at his club, where he sat drinking Scotch and smoking too much, and with her in their apartment, that seemed so large and lonely without Gordon and his restless moving around and his quick laughter. But it was no good; they were both adamant. Their separation has lasted now more than six months. I doubt very much that they will ever go back
minor sun, and as
a
—
together again. It all
nedictine.
started It
one night
at
Leonardo's, after dinner, over their Be-
started innocently
enough, amiably even, with laughter
from both of them, laughter that froze their words came out sharp and flat and
on and stinging. They had been to see Camille. Gordon hadn't liked it very much. Marcia had been crazy about it because she is crazy about Greta Garbo. She belongs to that considerable army of Garbo admirers whose enchantment borders almost on fanaticism and sometimes even touches the edges of frenzy. I think that, before everything happened, Gordon admired Garbo, too, but the depth finally as
the clock ran
of his wife's conviction that here was the greatest figure ever seen in our
generation on sea or land, on screen or stage, exasperated him that night.
Gordon
hates (or used to) exaggeration, and he respects (or once did)
detachment.
It
the fabric of a
was
his feeling that
woman's charm. He
detachment
is
a necessary thread in
didn't like to see his wife get herself
"into a sweat" over anything and, that night at Leonardo's, he unfortu-
nately used that expression and
made
that accusation.
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
104
Marcia responded, as I get it, by saying, a little loudly (they had gone on to Scotch and soda), that a man who had no abandon of feeling and no passion for anything was not altogether a man, and that his
detachment simply covered up a lack of critical appreciation and understanding of the arts in general. Her sentences were becoming long and wavy, and her words formal. Gordon suddenly began to pooh-pooh her; he kept saying "Pooh!" (an annoying mannerism of his, I have always thought). He wouldn't answer her arguments or even listen to them. That, of course, infuriated her. "Oh, pooh to you, too!" she finally more or less shouted. He snapped at her, "Quiet, for God's sake! You're yelling like a prizefight manager!" Enraged at that, she had recourse to her eyes as weapons and looked steadily at him for a while with the expression of one who is viewing a small and horrible animal, such as a horned toad. They then sat in moody and brooding silence for a long time, without moving a muscle, at the end of which, getting a hold on herself, Marcia asked him, quietly enough, just exactly what actor on the screen or on the stage, living or dead, he considered greater than Garbo. Gordon thought a moment and then said, as quietly as she had put the question, "Donald Duck." I don't believe that he meant it at the time, or even thought that he meant it. However that may have been, she looked at him scornfully and said that that speech just about perfectly represented the shallowness of his intellect and the small range so-called love of
of his imagination.
— she had
Gordon asked her not
raised her voice slightly
to
make
— and went on
a spectacle of herself to say that her failure
Donald Duck proved conclusively to him that she was a woman without humor. That, he said, he had always suspected; now, he said, he knew it. She had a great desire to hit him, but instead she sat back and looked at him with her special Mona Lisa smile, a smile rather more of contempt than, as in the original, of mystery. Gordon hated that smile, so he said that Donald Duck happened to be exactly ten times as great as Garbo would ever be and that anybody with a brain in his head would admit it instantly. Thus the Winships went on and on, their resentment swelling, their sense of values blurring, until it ended up with her taking a taxi home alone (leaving her vanity bag and one glove behind her in the restaurant) and with him making the rounds of the late places and rolling up to his club around dawn. There, as he got out, he asked his taxi driver which he liked better, Greta Garbo or Donald Duck, and the driver said he liked Greta Garbo best. Gordon said to him, bitterly, "Pooh to you, too, my good friend!" and went to bed. to see the genius of
The
next day, as
contrite, but
is
usual with married couples, they were both
behind their contrition lay sleeping the ugly words each
James Thurber
105
had used and the cold glances and the bitter gestures. She phoned him, because she was worried. She didn't want to be, but she was. When he hadn't come home, she was convinced he had gone to his club, but visions of him lying in a gutter or under a table, somehow horribly mangled, haunted her, and so at eight o'clock she called him up. Her heart lightened when he said, "Hullo," gruffly: he was alive, thank God! His heart may have lightened a little, too, but not very much, because he felt terrible. He felt terrible and he felt that it was her fault that he felt terrible. She said that she was sorry and that they had both been very silly, and he growled something about he was glad she realized she'd been silly, anyway. That attitude put a slight edge on the rest of her words. She asked him shortly if he was coming home. He said sure he was coming home; it was his home, wasn't it? She told him to go back to bed and not be such an old bear, and hung up. The next incident occurred at the Clarkes' party a few days
The Winships had
arrived in fairly
good
spirits to find
later.
themselves in a
buzzing group of cocktail drinkers that more or less revolved around the tall and languid figure of the guest of honor, an eminent lady novelist.
Gordon
evening
late in the
won
drink together and, feeling a
her attention and drew her apart for one
little
high and happy
at that time, as
is
the
enough (he wanted to get it out of his subconscious), the argument that he and his wife had had about the relative merits of Garbo and Duck. The tall lady, lowering her cigarette holder, said, in the spirit of his own gaiety, that he could count her in on his side. Unfortunately, Marcia Winship, standing some ten feet
way with husbands, mentioned,
away, talking to a
man
lightly
with a beard, caught not the
spirit
but only a few
words of the conversation, and jumped to the conclusion that her husband was deliberately reopening the old wound, for the purpose of humiliating her in public. I think that in another moment Gordon might
have brought her over, and put
— he was
his
arm around
her,
and admitted
his
But when he caught her eye, she gazed through him, freezingly, and his heart went down. And then his "defeat"
feeling pretty fine.
anger rose.
Their to go
fight, naturally
home from
enough, blazed out again
in the taxi they took
the party. Marcia wildly attacked the
woman
novelist
(Marcia had had quite a few cocktails), defended Garbo, excoriated Gor-
Donald Duck. Gordon tried for a while to explain exactly what had happened, and then he met her resentment with a
don, and
laid into
resentment that mounted even higher, the resentment of the misunderstood husband. In the midst of it all she slapped him. He looked at her for a
second under lowered eyelids and then
said, coldly, if a bit fuzzily,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
106
"This
is
Duck
is
the end, but
twenty times the
or she, ever for,
want you
I
live, if
why you
should!"
Garbo
artist
you do
to go to
— and
Then he
I
your grave knowing that Donald
will
ever be, the longest day you,
can't understand, with so
little
to live
asked the driver to stop the car, and he
got out, in wavering dignity. "Caricature! Cartoon!" she screamed after
—
Duck both, you " The driver drove on. saw Gordon he moved his things to the club
him. "You and Donald
The
last
time
I
—
the
next day, forgetting the trousers to his evening clothes and his razor
he had convinced himself that the point at issue between him and Marcia was one of extreme importance involving both his honor and his integrity. He said that now it could never be wiped out and forgotten. He said he sincerely believed Donald Duck was as great a creation as any animal in all the works of Lewis Carroll, probably even greater, perhaps much greater. He was drinking and there was a wild light in his eye. I reminded him of his old love of detachment, and he said to the hell with that
detachment.
I
laughed
at
him, but he wouldn't laugh.
grimly, "Marcia persists in her that
Donald Duck
with her again.
I
silly
believe that he
is
a genius, probably our only genius.
is
just
expect is
me
to do,
God
is
my
I
down some Scotch
of his obsession. I
live
man who
I
I
left
found Marcia
straight.
is
believe that!
pale, but calm,
and
created
What I
does she
think
Garbo
simply a cartoon? Never!"
"Never!"
him and went over
is
him that Greta Garbo
go whining back to her and pretend that
wonderful and that Donald Duck
gulped
cannot conscientiously
believe, further,
judge,
said,
and
great, that the
is
another actress. As
I
Swede
he
great
belief that that
merely a caricature,
is
"If,"
I
He
could not ridicule him out
to see Marcia. as firm in
her stand as Gordon
She insisted that he had deliberately tried to humiliate her before that gawky so-called novelist, whose clothes were the dowdiest she had ever seen and whose affectations obviously covered up a complete lack of individuality and intelligence. I tried to convince her that she was wrong about Gordon's attitude at the Clarkes' party, but she said she knew him like a book. Let him get a divorce and marry that creature if he wanted to. They can sit around all day, she said, and all night, too, for all I care, and talk about their precious Donald Duck, the damn comic strip! I told Marcia that she shouldn't allow herself to get so worked up about a trivial and nonsensical matter. She said it was not silly and nonsensical to her. It might have been once, yes, but it wasn't now. It had made her see Gordon clearly for what he was, a cheap, egotistical, resentful cad who would descend to ridicule his wife in front of a scrawny, horrible stranger who could not write and never would be able was
in his.
to write.
Furthermore, her belief
in
Garbo's greatness was a thing she
James Thurber
loy
could not deny and would not deny, simply for the sake of living under the same roof with
Gordon Winship. The whole
parcel of her integrity as a
woman and
as
an
—
thing was part and
as an, well, as a
woman.
She could go to work again; he would find out. There was, nothing more that I could say or do. I went home. That night, however, I found that I had not really dismissed the whole ridiculous affair, as I hoped I had, for I dreamed about it. I had tried to ignore the thing, but it had tunneled deeply into my subconscious. I dreamed that I was out hunting with the Winships and that, as we crossed a snowy field, Marcia spotted a rabbit and, taking quick aim, fired and brought it down. We all ran across the snow toward the rabbit, but I reached it first. It was quite dead, but that was not what struck horror into me as I picked it up. What struck horror into me was that it was a white rabbit and was wearing a vest and carrying a watch. I woke up with a start. I don't know whether that dream means that I am on Gordon's side or on Marcia's. I don't want to analyze it. I am trying to forget the whole miserable business.
E. B.
White
ACROSS THE STREET AND INTO THE GRILL
(With respects to Ernest Hemingway)
my
and best and true and only meal, thought Mr. Perley as he descended at noon and swung east on the beat-up sidewalk of Fortyfifth Street. Just ahead of him was the girl from the reception desk. I am a little fleshed up around the crook of the elbow, thought Perley, but I
This
is
last
commute good. He quickened
his step to overtake
a stinking trade
is,
it
assistant treasurers,
I
her and
felt
the pain again.
What
he thought. But after what I've done to other can't hate anybody. Sixteen deads, and I don't
know how many possibles. The girl was near enough now so he could smell her fresh receptiveness, and the lint in her hair. Her skin was light blue, like the sides of horses. "I
love you," he said, "and
we
are going to lunch together for the "
first
and only time, and I love you very much. "Hello, Mr. Perley," she said, overtaken.
"Let's not think of any-
thing."
A
from the sad old Guaranty Trust Company, their wings set for a landing. A lovely double, thought Perley, as he pulled. "Shall we go to the Hotel Biltmore, on Vanderbilt Avenue, which is merely a feeder land for the great streets, or shall we go to Schrafft's, where my old friend Botticelli is captain of girls and where pair of fantails flew over
thev have the mavonnaise in fiascos?"
White
E. B.
109
must phone public booth and dialed true and well,
"Let's go to Schrafft's," said the girl, low.
Mummy." She
stepped into a
Then she
using her finger.
"But
first
I
telephoned.
As they walked on, she smelled good. She smells good, thought Perley. But that's all right, I add good. And when we get to Schrafft's, I'll order from the menu, which I like very much indeed. They entered the restaurant. The wind was still west, ruffling the edges of the cookies. In the elevator, Perley took the controls. "I'll run it,"
he
said to the operator. "I
checked out long ago."
the third floor, and they stepped off into the men's
"Good morning, my
He
stopped true
at
grill.
coming who he knew
Assistant Treasurer," said Botticelli,
He nodded
forward with a fiasco in each hand.
at
the
girl,
was from the West Seventies and whom he desired. "Can you drink the water here? asked Perley. He had the fur trapper's eye and took in the room at a glance, noting that there was one "
empty
table
and three pretty
Botticelli led the
flanks
way
waitresses. to the table in the corner,
would be covered.
"Alexanders," said Perley. "Eighty-six to one.
them.
where Perley 's
Is this
table
Botticelli
The way
Chris mixes
Daughter?"
all right.
disappeared and returned soon, carrying the old Indian
blanket.
"That's the "Yes.
same
To keep
backs of his eyes.
blanket, isn't
it?"
asked Perley.
the wind off," said the Captain, smiling from the
"It's still
west.
It
should bring the ducks in tomorrow,
the chef thinks."
from the reception desk crawled down under the table and pulled the Indian blanket over them so it was solid and good and covered them right. The girl put her hand on his wallet. It was cracked and old and held his commutation book. "We are having fun, Mr. Perley and the
aren't
girl
we?" she asked.
"Yes, Sister," he said.
have here the soft-shelled crabs, my Assistant Treasurer," said Botticelli. "And another fiasco of the 1926. This one is cold." "Dee the soft-shelled crabs," said Perley from under the blanket. "I
He
put his arm around the receptionist good.
"Do you think we should have a green pokeweed "Or shall we not think of anything for a while?"
"We
shall
not think of anything for a while, and Botticelli would
bring the pokeweed
Then he spoke
salad?" she asked.
if
there was any," said Perley. "It
to the Captain. "Botticelli,
isn't
the season."
do you remember when we
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
110
took
all
the mailing envelopes from the stockroom, spit on the flaps, and
then drank rubber cement "I little
remember,
my
till
the foot soldiers arrived?"
Assistant Treasurer," said the Captain.
It
was a
joke they had.
"He used
to
mimeograph
that was another war.
Do
"Please keep telling
I
pretty good," said Perley to the
girl.
"But
bore you. Mother?"
me
about your business experiences, but not
the rough parts." She touched his hand where the knuckles were scarred
and stained by so many old mimeographings. "Are both your ered,
my
dearest?" she asked, plucking at the blanket.
flanks cov-
They
felt
the
Alexanders in their eyeballs. Eighty-six to one.
good place and we're having fun and I love you," Perley said. He took another swallow of the 1926, and it was a good and careful swallow. "The stockroom men were very brave," he said, "but it "Schrafft's
is
a position
is
where
a
it is
extremely
difficult to stay alive. Just outside that
way of the stuff that is being brought up. The hell with it. When you make a breakthrough. Daughter, first you clean out the baskets and the half-wits, and all the time they have the fire escapes taped. They also shell you with old production orders, many of them approved by the general manager in charge of sales. I am boring you and I will not at this time discuss the general manager in charge of sales as we are unquestionably being lis-
room
there
is
a
little
bare-assed highboy and
tened to by that waitress over there "I
am
going to give you
my
who
is
it is
in the
setting out the decoys."
piano," the
girl said,
"so that
when you
you can think of me. It will be something between us." "Call up and have them bring the piano to the restaurant," said Perley. "Another fiasco, Botticelli!" They drank the sauce. When the piano came, it wouldn't play. The keys were stuck good. "Never mind, we'll leave it here, Cousin," said look at
it
Perley.
They came out from under the blanket and
Perley tipped their
minus withholding. They left the piano in the restaurant, and when they went down the elevator and out and turned in to the old, hard, beat-up pavement of Fifth Avenue and headed south toward Forty-fifth Street, where the pigeons were, the air was as clean as your grandfather's howitzer. The wind was still west. I commute good, thought Perley, looking at his watch. And he felt waitress exactly fifteen per cent
the old pain of going back to Scarsdale again.
Wolcott Gibbs TIME
Sad-eyed
.
.
.
FORTUNE
month was nimble,
last
.
.
.
LIFE
.
.
LUCE
.
he told newshawks of the sale of the fifty-three-year-old to Time. For celebrated name alone, price: $85,000.
well as
Said he: "Life
.
.
Maxgagmag
middle-sized Life-President Clair
introduced to the world the drawings ... of
.
James Whitcomb Riley and Oliver Herford, such writers as John Kendrick Bangs. Beginning next month the magazine Life will embark on a new venture such
men
Charles
as
Dana Gibson,
the verses of
.
.
.
.
.
.
entirely unrelated to the old."
How
unrelated to the world of the Gibson Girl
is
this
new venture
might have been gathered at the time from a prospectus issued by enormous, Apollo-faced C. D. Jackson, of Time, Inc. "Life," wrote he, "will show us the Man-of-the-Week ... his body clothed, and,
if
possible,
nude."
It will
expose "the loves, scandals, and
personal affairs of the plain and fancy citizen
.
.
.
and write around them
good-tempered 'colyumnist' review of these once-private lives." 29,000 die-hard subscribers to Life,'' long accustomed to he-she
a light,
many
jokes,
ignorant of King of England's once-private
life
{Time, July
25 et seq.), will be comforted for the balance of their subscription periods
by familiar, innocent
jocosities of Judge. First issue of
new
publication
went out last week to 250,000 readers, carried advertisements suggesting an annual revenue of $1,500,000, pictured Russian peasants in the nude, the love
life
of the Black
Widow spider,
referred inevitably to Mrs. Ernest
Simpson.
most incomprehensible Timenterprise looms, as usual, ambitious, gimlet-eyed, Baby Tycoon Henry Robinson Luce, coBehind
*
this latest,
Peak oi Life circulation
(1921): 250,000.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
112
founder of Time, promulgator of Fortune, potent
in associated radio
&
cinema ventures. "high-buttoned
Headman Luce was born
.
.
.
BRILLIANT
Tengchowfu, China, on April 3, 1898, the son of Henry Winters & Elizabeth Middleton Luce, Presbyterian missionaries. Very unlike the novels of Pearl Buck were his early days. Under brows too beetling for a baby, young Luce grew up inside the compound, played with his two sisters, lisped first Chinese, dreamed much of the Occident. At 14, weary of poverty, already respecting wealth & power, he sailed alone for England, entered school at St. Albans. Restless again, he came to the United States, enrolled at Hotchkiss, met up & coming young Brooklynite Briton Hadden. Both even then were troubled with an itch to harass the public. Intoned Luce years later: "We reached the conclusion that most people were not well informed & that something should be done. ..." First publication to inform fellowman was Hotchkiss Weekly Record; next Yale Daily News, which they turned into a tabloid; fought to double hours of military training, fought alumni who wished to change tune of Yale song from Die Wacht am Rhein. Traditionally unshaven, wearing high-buttoned Brooks jackets, soft white collars, cordovan shoes, no garters, Luce & Hadden were Big Men on a campus then depleted of other, older Big vous, was Skull
&
in
Men
by the war. Luce, pale, intense, ner-
Bones, Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa,
member
the Student Council, editor of the News; wrote sad poems, read the
Republic, studied political philosophy. As successful,
less earnest,
of
New more
Hadden collected china dogs, made jokes.* In 1920 the senior class voted Hadden Most Likely to Succeed, Luce Most Brilliant. Most Brilliant he. Luce sloped off to Christ Church, Oxford, there to study convivial,
European conditions, take
field trips into
the churning Balkans.
BEST ADVICE: DON't
commencement, in the city room of PaperFrank Munsey's Baltimore News, met again Luce, Hadden. News-
Twenty months killer
after
hawks by day, at night they wrangled over policies of the magazine they had been planning since Hotchkiss. Boasted the final prospectus: "Time will be free from cheap sensationalism windy bias." In May, 1922, began the long struggle to raise money to start Time. .
'
Once, watching Luce going
.
.
past, laden with cares
chuckled, upspoke: "Look out, Harry. You'll drop the college."
&
responsibiUties,
Hadden
WolcottGibbs
113
Newton D. Baker, Nicholas Murray Butler, Herbert Bayard Swope, William Lyon Phelps. Pooh-poohed Review don't do it." of Reviews Owner Charles Lanier: "My best advice From studious, pint-sized Henry Seidel Canby, later editor of Lamontbacked Saturday Review of Literature, came only encouraging voice in Skeptical at the outset proved
.
this
.
.
threnody.
Undismayed Luce
&
Hadden took
the
first
of
many
old brownstone house at 9 East 17th Street, furnished
offices in
with a
it
an
filing
cabinet, four second-hand desks, a big brass bowl for cigarette stubs,
sought backers.*
JPMorganapoleon H. P. Davison, Yale classmate of Luce, Hadden, great & good friend of both, in June contributed $4,000. Next to succumb: Mrs. David S. Ingalls, sister of Classmate William Hale Harkness; amount, $10,000. From Brother Bill, $5,000. Biggest early angel, Mrs. William Hale Harkness, mother of Brother Bill & Mrs. Ingalls, invested $20,000. Other original stockholders: Robert A. Chambers, Ward Che-
*
In return for $50 cash, original investors were given two shares
with a par value of $25, one share Class
A Common were so of Class A Common,
ferred, 1,720 Class
170 shares
A Common
Preferred Stock
sold.
8,000 shares of Class
value, not entitled to dividends until Preferred Shares
Briton Hadden, Henry R. Luce,
6%
Stock without par value. 3,440 Pre-
who
B Common,
had been
also without par
retired,
were issued to
gave one-third to associates, divided remainder
equally.
In 1925, authorized capital of Time, Inc., was increased to 19,006 shares; of which
8,000 were Preferred, 3,000 Class A; as before, 8,000 Class B. In June, 1930
(if
you are
still
dividends were initiated for both Class A, 7,900 Class
B
following
this),
Common Stocks.
the Preferred Stock was retired in
Corporation
at this
full
&
time had 2,400 shares
outstanding.
By the spring of 1931 Time had begun to march, shares were nominally quoted at $1,000. Best financial minds advised splitting stock on basis of twenty shares for one. Outstanding after clever maneuver: 206,400 shares In 1933, outlook
still
Common.
gorgeous, each share of stock was
reclassified into i/ioth share
of $6.50 Dividend Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock ($6.50 div.
cum. con.
pfd. stk.)
Common Stock. New div. cum. con. pfd. stk. was convertible into a half of New Common Stock, then selling around $40 a share, now quoted at
and one share of New share and a
over $200. Present
number
of shares outstanding, 238,000; paper value of shares, $47,000,000;
Luce holding, 102,300 shares; paper value, $20,460,000; conservative estimate of Luce income from Time stock (shares earned $9.74 in 1935, paid so far in 1936, $6.50; anticipated dividend for full year, $8), $818,400; reported Luce income from conservative estimate of
other investments, $100,000; reported Luce bagatelle as editor of Time, Inc., $45,000; re-
ported total Lucemolument, $963,400.
Boy!
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
114
ney, F. Trubee Davison, E. Roland Harriman, Dwight
W. Morrow,
Harvey S. Firestone, Jr., Seymour H. Knox, William V. Griffin. By November Luce & Hadden had raised $86,000, decided to go to work on fellowman.
"snaggle-toothed
Puny
.
.
.
PIG-FACED
in spite of these preparations, prosy in spite of the contribu-
MacLeish & John Farrar, was the first issue of Time on March 3, 1923. Magazine went to 9,000 subscribers; readers learned that Uncle Joe Cannon had retired at 86, that there was a famine in Russia, that Thornton Wilder friend Tunney had defeated Greb. Yet to suggest itself as a rational method of communication, of tions of Yale poets Archibald
infuriating readers
Timestyle. ers,* his ish.
It
into buying the magazine,
was strange inverted
was months before Hadden's impish contempt
for his read-
impatience with the English language, crystallized into gibber-
By the end of the
able, potent, nimble;
first
were calling people
year, however, Timeditors
"Tycoon," most successful Timepithet, had been
coined by Editor Laird Shields Goldsborough; so fascinated Hadden with "beady-eyed" that for months nobody was anything
were deemed such designations
as
"Tom-tom"
Heflin,
Timeworthy "Body-lover" Macelse.
fadden.
"Great word! Great word!" would crow Hadden, coming upon "snaggle-toothed," "pig-faced." Appearing already were such
maddening
coagulations as "cinemaddict," "radiorator." Appearing also were gratuitous invasions of privacy. Always mentioned as William Hearst's "great
first
Randolph
& good friend" was Cinemactress Marion Davies,
stressed
was the bastardy of Ramsay MacDonald, the "cozy hospitality" of Mae West. Backward ran sentences until reeled the mind. By March, 1924, the circulation had doubled, has risen since then 40,000 a year, reaches now the gratifying peak of 640,000, is still growing.
From
four meagre pages in
eclipse that in Satevepost.
Time advertising has now come to Published Time in first six months of 1936, first
issue,
i,S90 pages; Satevepost, 1,480.
NO SLUGABED, HE
.
.
.
Strongly contrasted from the outset of their venture were Hadden,
Luce. Hadden, handsome, black-haired, eccentric,
by playing baseball with the * Still
his ways!"
framed
at
Time
is
office boys,
irritated his
partner
by making jokes, by lack of
Hadden's scrawled dictum: "Let Subscriber Goodkind
mend
Wolcott Gibbs
115
Luce disapproved of heavy games of tennis, said once: "I have no
respect for autocratic business. Conformist drinking, played hard, sensible
use for a to
man who
lies in
bed
after
work every morning, reproved
of "log-cabin
a writer
who
asked for a desk for lack
spirit."
when Time moved
In 1925, lious
nine o'clock in the morning," walked
its
offices to Cleveland, bored, rebel-
was Editor Hadden; Luce, busy
Chamber
&
lunched with
social,
Commerce, subscribed
local big-
Symphony Orchestra, had neat house in the suburbs. Dismayed was Luce when Hadden met him on return from Europe with premature plans to move addressed
wigs,
New York.
the magazine back to tion,
Hadden
new beloved
still
of
to
In 1929, dying of a streptococcus infec-
opposed certain
details of success-formula of
Fortune,
Lucenterprise.
OATS, HOGS, CHEESE
.
.
.
was mailed to 30,000 subscribers, cost as now $1 a copy, contained articles on branch banking, hogs, glassblowing, how to live in Chicago on $25,000 a year. Latest issue (Nov., 1936) went to 130,000 subscribers, contained articles on bacon, In January, 1930,
tires,
the
New
first
issue of Fortune
Deal, weighed as
much
as a good-sized flounder.*
Although in 1935 Fortune made a net profit of $500,000, vaguely dissatisfied was Editor Luce. Anxious to find & express "the technological significance of industry," he has been handicapped by the fact that his writers are often hostile to Big Business,
prone to
insert sneers, slithering
on Bernard Baruch, the banker was described as calling President Hoover "old cheese-face." Protested Tycoon Baruch that he had said no such thing. Shotup of this was that Luce, embarrassed, printed a retraction; now often removes too- vivid phrasing from insults. In
an
article
writers' copy.
H Typical perhaps of material. Writers in
occur to them. This
first is
Luce methods
is
Fortune system of getting
down wild gossip, any figures that victim, who indignantly corrects the errors,
draft put
sent to
inadvertently supplies facts he might otherwise have withheld. H
March of Time
on March
in approximately
its
present form was
first
broad-
Columbia System for privilege, dropped from the air in February, 1932, with Luce attacking radio's "blatant claim to be a medium of education." Said he: "Should Time or any other
cast
6, 1931,
paid the
business feel obliged to be the philanthropist of the *
Two pounds,
nine ounces.
air;
to continue to
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
Il6
pay for radio advertising it doesn't want in order to provide radio with something worthwhile?" So popular, so valuable to the studio was March of Time that it was restored in September of the same year, with Columfacilities. Since then March of Time has been bia donating its time
&
sponsored by Remington Rand typewriter company, by Wrigley's gum, of Time, has made 400 broadcasts.* Apparently reconciled to philanthropy is Luce, because time for latest version will
by
own cinema March
its
be bought
No
t
& paid for by his organization. active connection
now
has Luce with the moving-picture edi-
March of Time, which was
tion of
first
shown on February
1,
1935,
appears thirteen times a year in over 6,000 theatres, has so far failed to
make money,
to repay $900,000 investment.
Even
less
connection has
he with Time's only other unprofitable venture. Fifty-year-old Architectural Forum, acquired in 1932, loses still between $30,000 and $50,000 a year, circulates to 31,000. H Letters, five-cent fortnightly collection of
Times correspondence
indefatigable readers, was started in 1931, goes to 30,000,
makes
with
its
a
money. H For a time. Luce was on Board of Directors of Paramount
little
Hoped
tures.
to learn
Pic-
something of cinema, heard nothing discussed but
banking, resigned sadly.
FASCINATING FACTS
Net
profits of
Time,
.
.
.
DREAMY FIGURES
.
.
.
Inc., for the past nine years:
1927
3,860
1928
125,787
1929
325,412
1930
818,936
1931
847,447
1932
613,727!
1933
1,009,628
1934
1,773,094
1935
$2,249,823!
*
have calculated that March of Time most popular of all radio programs; reaches between
By some devious necromancy,
ranks just behind
Amos
&
Andy
as
statisticians
8,000,000 and 9,000,000 newshungry addicts. t
Hmm.
I
Exceeded only by Curtis Publishing Co.
ing Co. (Collier's): $2,399,600.
(Satevepost): $5,329,000; Crowell Publish-
WolcottGibbs
117
In 1935 gross revenue of Time-Fortune was $8,621,170, of which
the newsmagazine brought in approximately $6,000,000. Outside invest-
ments netted $562,295. For rent, salaries, production & distribution, other expenses went $6,594,076. Other deductions: $41,397. Allowance for federal income tax: $298,169. H Times books, according to Chicago Statisticians Gerwig & Gerwig, show total assets of $6,755,451. Liabilities, $3,101,584. These figures, conventionally allowing $1 for name, prestige of Time, come far from Luce, his enterprises. Sitting pretty are the
reflecting actual prosperity of
boys.
LUCE Transmogrified by
this
.
.
.
MARCHES ON!
success are the offices, personnel of Time-
Fortune. Last reliable report: Time, 308 employees; Fortune, 103; Cine-
march, York; 216.
58;
Radiomarch,
total, 566. In
Grand
total
recompense
From
Forum,
Architectural
Chicago, mailing,
editorial,
Timemployees on God's
40; Life, 47. In
New
mechanical employees,
earth, 782.
Average weekly
for informing fellowman, $45.67802.
first
single office,
floors of spiked, shiny
many
10;
Timen have come
to bulge to bursting six
Chrysler Building, occupy 150 rooms, eat daily,
famed Cloud Club, over 1,000 eggs, 500 cups of coffee, much bicarbonate of soda. Other offices: Cinemarch, loth Avenue at 54th Street; Radiomarch, Columbia Broadcasting Building. at
Ornamented with
Yale, Harvard, Princeton diplomas, stuffed fish,
terrestrial globes are offices
the writer's dingy H Heir
&
& other headmen; bleak,
uncarpeted
lair.
apparent to mantle of Luce
$35,ooo-a-year president
of Luce
Roy Larsen, nimble
in
is
dapper,
Radio-
&
tennis-playing,
Cinemarch,
vice-
second largest stockholder in Time, Inc. Stock income:
$120,000. H
Looming behind him
McAllister Ingersoll,
tumbledown Yaleman Ralph former Fortuneditor, now general manager of all is
burly, able,
Timenterprises, descendant of 400-famed
desk with
pills,
Ward
McAllister. Littered his
unguents, Kleenex, Socialite Ingersoll
hypochondriac, introduced ant palaces for study ees, writes copious
memoranda about
Time's No.
1
& emulation of employ-
seldom $30,000; income from stock:
filing
misses a Yale football game. His salary:
is
systems, other
trivia,
$40,000. H Early in
life
Timeditor John Stuart Martin
lost his left
arm
in
an
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
Il8
accident.
Unhandicapped he,
golf at Princeton,
is
resentful of sympathy, Martin played par
a crack shot with a
rifle
or shotgun, holds a telephone
with no hands, using shoulder
&
Cofounder Hadden, joined
second marriage to daughter of Cunard
Tycoon
in
chin, chews paperclips. First cousin of
managing
newsmagazine, has been nimble in Cinemarch, other Timenterprises, makes $25,000 a year salary, gets from stock $60,000. H $20,000 salary, $20,000 from stock gets shyest, least-known of all Timeditors, Harvardman John S. Billings, Jr., now under Luce in charge of revamped Life, once Washington correspondent for the Brooklyn Eagle, once National Affairs Editor for Time. Yclept "most important man in shop" by Colleague Martin, Billings, brother of famed muralist Henry Billings, is naive, solemn, absent-minded, once printed same story twice, wanted to print, as news, story of van Gogh's self-mutilation, Sir
Ashley Sparks, Timartin
is
editor of
drives to office in car with liveried chauffeur, likes Jones Beach.
H Fortuneditor Eric Hodgins
graduate. Formerly
is
thin-haired, orbicular,
on Redbook, boy
&
girl
no Big Three
informing Youth's
Compan-
Hodgins inherited Pill-Swallower IngersoU's editorial job tv\'o years ago when latter was called to greater glory, higher usefulness, still writes much of content of magazine, is paid $15,000; from stock only $8,000. ion,
Doomed
anonymity are Time-Fortune staff writers, but generally known in spite of this are former Times Bookritic John Chamberlain, Meistersinger Archibald MacLeish. Both out of sympathy with domineering business, both irked by stylistic restrictions, thorns to Luce as well as jewels they. Reward for lack of fame: Chamberlain, $10,000; MacLeish, $15,000; each, two months' vacation. Brisk beyond belief are carryings-on these days in Luce's chromium tower. Time, marching on more militantly than ever, is a shambles on Sundays & Mondays, when week's news is teletyped to Chicago printing H
to strict
plant; Fortune, energetic, dignified,
cookies,
is
ever
staff to Japan;
astir
its
offices smelling
comfortably of
with such stupefying projects as sending the entire
new whoopsheet
Life so deep in organization that staff
from 6,000 submitted photographs the Nude of the Week; so harried perpetually all editors that even interoffice memoranda are couched in familiar Timestyle,* that an appointment to breakfasts are held to choose
lunch with Editor Luce must be made three weeks *
Sample Luce memorandum: "Let Times
Japanese beetle. H.R.L."
editors next
in advance.
week put thought on the
Wolcott Gibbs
119
Caught up also in the whirlwind of progress are Time, Fortunes 19 maiden checkers. Bryn Mawr, Wellesley, Vassar graduates they, each is assigned to a staff writer, checks every word he writes, works hard & late, is
barred by magazine's anti-feminine policy from editorial advancement.
COLD, BAGGY, TEMPERATE
At work today. Luce
is
efficient,
.
.
.
humorless, revered by colleagues;
arrives always at 9:15, leaves at 6, carrying armfuls of work, talks jerkily,
carefully, avoiding visitor's eye; stutters in conversation, never in speech-
Luce desk like butlers were writers while he praised or blamed; now most business is done by time-saving memoranda called "Luce's bulls." Prone he to wave aside pleasantries, social preliminaries, to get at once to the matter in hand. Once to interviewer who said, "I hope I'm not disturbing you," snapped Luce, "Well, you are." To ladies full of gentle misinformation he is brusque, contradictory, hostile; says that his only hobby is "conversing with somebody who knows something," argues still that "names make news," that he would not hesitate to print a scandal involving his best friend. Because of his Chinese birth, constantly besieged is Luce by visiting Orientals; he is polite, forbearing, seethes secretly. Lunch, usually in a private room at the Cloud Club, is eaten quickly, little attention paid to making. In early days kept standing
the food, all
much
to business.
times, takes sometimes
He
at
drinks not at
champagne
all at
at dinner,
midday, sparingly
at
an occasional cocktail
Embarrassed perhaps by reputation for unusual abstemiousness, he confesses proudly that he smokes too much. at parties.
Serious, ambitious Yale standards are
still
reflected in
much
of his
conduct; in indiscriminate admiration for bustling success, in strong
re-
gard for conventional morality; in honest passion for accuracy; physically, in conservative,
baggy clothes, white
collars, solid-color ties.
A
budding
joiner, in
a
box
at
the Metropolitan;
is
New
with buttoned-down
York, Luce belongs to
& Cloud Clubs; listed in Who's Who & Social Register.
the Yale, Coffee House, Racquet
owns
shirts
&
Tennis, Union,
more dignified than in the early days of the magazine, his prose style has grown less ebullient, resembles pontifical Fortune rather than chattering Time. Before some important body he makes now at least one speech a year, partly as a form of self-discipline, Colder,
more
certain,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
120
partly
because he
demands
feels that his position as
head of
a national institution
His interests wider, he likes to travel, meet
it.
Great. Five or six times in Europe, he has observed Great.
Of a twenty-minute
&
observe the
many Great
conversation with King Edward, then Prince
of Wales, says only "Very interesting." Returning from such always provides staff
& Near
members with
lo
&
12-page
memoranda
trips,
he
carefully
explaining conditions.
Orated recently of conditions in this country: "Without the aristoWhat slowly deadened our cratic principle no society can endure. .
was the expanding
aristocratic sense
machine.
.
.
.
But the
aristocratic
.
.
principle
States in our fetish of comparative success.
without any
common
but more the expanding
frontier,
persisted .
.
.
We
in
the United
got a plutocracy
sense of dignity and obligation.
Money became
more and more the only mark of success, but still we insisted that the and the rich man accepted rich man was no better than the poor man the verdict. And so let me make it plain, the triumph of the mass mind is nowhere more apparent than in the frustration of the upper classes."
—
Also remarked in conversation: "Trouble
ment
—
is
the automobile
hasn't provided
trailer.
good homes
for
is
— great
anti-social develop-
Greatest failure of this country its
is
that
it
people. Trailer shows that."
MILESTONES Good-naturedly amused by Luce tycoon ambitions was Lila Hotz,
whom
he married there on Dec. 22, 1923. In 1935, the father of two boys. Luce was divorced by her in Reno on Oct. 5. Married in Old Greenwich, Conn., without attendants, on Nov. 23, 1935, were Luce, Novelist-Playwright Clare Booth Brokaw, described once by Anglo-aesthete Cecil Beaton as "most drenchingly beautiful," former of Chicago,
George Tuttle Brokaw. Two days before ceremony, "Abide with Me," by new, beautiful Mrs. Luce, was produced at the Ritz Theatre. Play dealt with young
wife of elderly Pantycoon
woman
married to sadistic drunkard, was unfavorably reviewed by
newspaper
all
critics.*
Of it said Richard Watts, blue-shirted, moon-faced Tnftune dramappraiser; "One almost forgave 'Abide with Me' its faults when its lovely playwright, who must '
have been crouched
in the
wings for a sprinter's
start as
scended, heard a cry of 'author,' which was not audible in to accept the audience's applause just as the actors,
properly lined
up and smoothed out
to receive their
the final curtain mercifully de-
my
vicinity,
who had
and arrived onstage
a head-start
customary adulation."
on
her,
were
121
Wolcott Gibbs
quandary was Bridegroom Luce when Time's own critic submitted a review suggesting play had some merit. Said he: "Show isn't that Write what you thought." Seven times, howGo back. good. ever, struggled the writer before achieving an acceptable compromise In a
.
.
between
.
.
.
.
criticism, tact.
A MILLION ROOMS, A THOUSAND BATHS
Long accustomed intimate of Mr.
&
.
.
.
to being entertained, entertaining,
is
Mrs. A. Coster Schermerhorn, Bernard
Jock Whitney, glistening stage
&
literary stars.
Many were
Mrs. Luce,
M. Baruch, invited last
summer to 30-acre estate in Stamford to play tennis, croquet, swim; many more will be when Mrs. Luce has finished her new play, "The Women,"* when Lifes problems, budding policies have been settled by Luce.
Many,
too, will
Charleston, S.C.; cottages.
Given
$500,000 in cash
come
will sleep
to
&
first
Luce
plantation, near
there in four streamlined, prefabricated guest
Mrs. Luce in divorce settlement, along with
securities,
where Luce once planned
man
to 7,000-acre, $100,000
was French Manoir
at Gladstone, N.J.,
Angus cows,
to raise Black
to
become
gentle-
farmer.
Described too modestly by him to Newyorkereporter
as "smallest
apartment in River House,"! Luce duplex at 435 East 52nd Street contains 15 rooms, 5 baths, a lavatory; was leased furnished from Mrs. Bodrero
Macy
for $7,300 annually, contains
Italian antiques, looks
many
north and east on the
valuable French, English,
river.
In decor, Mrs.
Luce
modern; evasive is Luce. Says he: "Just like things convenient sensible." Says also: "Whatever furniture or houses we buy in the
prefers the
&
future will be
my wife's
buying, not mine."
WHITHER, WHITHER?
tion,
Accused by many of Fascist leanings, of soaring journalistic ambimuch & conflicting is the evidence on Luce political faith, future
*
Moss
Among
backers are sad, ramshackle George S. Kaufman, high-domed fur-bearing
Hart. t
Smallest apartment in River
House has
six
rooms, one bath.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
122
plans.
By
tradition a Tory, in 1928
for Herbert
Hoover,
this
he voted
year for Alfred
William Randolph Hearst,
it
for Alfred E. Smith, in 1932
M. Landon. Long
was rumored that a
visit last
with
at outs
spring to Cali-
fornia included a truce with ruthless, shifting publisher. Close friend for
years of
Thomas Lamont, Henry
has been hinted that an
it
in the future
is
official
P.
Davison, the
late
Dwight Morrow,
connection with the House of Morgan
not impossible. Vehemently denies
this
Luce, denies any
personal political ambition, admits only that he would like eventually to
own
a daily
newspaper
in
New York.
Most persistent, most fantastic rumor, however, declares that Yaleman Luce already has a wistful eye on the White House. Reported this recently Chicago's Ringmaster, added: "A legally-minded friend told him that his Chinese birth made him ineligible. Luce dashed to another lawyer to check. Relief! He was born of American parents and properly .
.
.
registered at the Consulate."
Whatever the facts in that matter, indicative of Luce consciousness of budding greatness, of responsibility to whole nation, was his report to Times Board of Directors on March 19, 1936. Declaimed he: "The expansion of your company has brought it to a point beyond which it will cease to be even a big Small Business and become a small Big Business. The problem of public relations also arises. Time, the Weekly Newsmagazine, has been, and still is, its own adequate apologist. Ditto, Fortune. But with a motion-picture journal, a nightly radio broadcast, and with four magazines, the public interpretation of your company's alleged viewpoint or viewpoints must be taken with great seriousness." Certainly to be taken with seriousness is Luce at thirty-eight, his fellowman already informed up to his ears, the shadow of his enterprises long across the .
.
.
land, his future plans impossible to imagine, staggering to contemplate.
Where
it all
will
end, knows God!
Gibbons
Stella
EXCERPT FROM
COLD COMFORT FARM
her introduction to Cold Comfort Farm,
[In
author wrote: "And
it is
only because
I
have
in
first
published in 1932, the
mind
all
those thousands of
who work in the vulgar and meaningless and homes, and who are not always sure whether
persons, not unlike myself,
bustle
of offices, shops
a sen-
tence the
is
Literature or whether
method perfected by the
it is
late
just
sheer flapdoodle, that
genius.
man
have adopted
Herr Baedeker, and firmly marked what
consider the finer passages with one, two or three did the good
I
stars.
In such a
manner
deal with cathedrals, hotels and paintings by
There seems no reason why
it
I
men
of
should not be applied to passages in
novels. It
Dawn
ought to help the reviewers, too."
crept over the
Downs
— ED.]
like a sinister
white animal, followed by the
wind eating its way between the black boughs of the thorns. The wind was the furious voice of this sluggish animal light that was baring the dormers and mullions and scullions of Cold Comfort snarling cries of a
Farm.
The farm was crouched on
a bleak hillside,
whence
its fields,
fanged
dropped steeply to the village of Howling a mile away. Its stables and outhouses were built in the shape of a rough octangle surrounding the farmhouse itself, which was built in the shape of a rough triangle. The left point of the triangle abutted on the farthest point of
with
flints,
the octangle, which was formed by the cowsheds, which lay parallel with the big barn.
The outhouses were
roofs, while the
farm
itself
built of roughcast stone, with
was partly
built of local flint, set in
thatched
cement,
and partly of some stone brought at great trouble and enormous expense from Perthshire. The farmhouse was a long, low building, two-storied in parts. Other
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
124
were three-storied. Edward the Sixth had originally owned it in the form of a shed in which he housed his swineherds, but he had grown tired of it, and had it rebuilt in Sussex clay. Then he pulled it down. Elizabeth had rebuilt it, with a good many chimneys in one way and another. The Charleses had let it alone; but William and Mary had pulled it down again, and George the First had rebuilt it. George the parts of
it
Second, however, burned
it
down. George the Third added another
wing. George the Fourth pulled
it
down
again.
By the time England began to develop that magnificent blossoming of trade and imperial expansion which fell to her lot under Victoria, there was not
much
of the original building
left,
save the tradition that
it
had always been there. It crouched, like a beast about to spring, under the bulk of Mock-uncle Hill. Like ghosts embedded in brick and stone, the architectural variations of each period through which it had passed were mute history. It was known locally as "The King's Whim." The front door of the farm faced a perfectly inaccessible ploughed field at the back of the house; it had been the whim of Red Raleigh Starkadder, in 1835, to have it so; and so the family always used to come in by the back door, which abutted on the general yard facing the cowsheds. A long corridor ran halfway through the house on the second story and then stopped. One could not get into the attics at all. It was all very awkward. .
came
.
.
Growing with the viscous
light that
was invading the
sky, there
the solemn, tortured-snake voice of the sea, two miles away, falling
upon the mirror-expanses of the beach. Under the ominous bowl of the sky a man was ploughing the
in sharp folds
ing field immediately below the farm,
where the
flints
slop-
shone bone-sharp
and white in the growing light. The ice-cascade of the wind leaped over him, as he guided the plough over the flinty runnels. Now and again he called roughly to his team:
"Upidee, Travail! Ho, there. Arsenic! Jug-jug!" But for the most
and silent were his team. The light showed no more of his face than a grey expanse of flesh, expressionless as the land he ploughed, from which looked out two sluggish eyes. Every now and again, when he came to the corner of the field and part
he worked
was forced to
in silence,
tilt
the scranlet of his plough almost on to
the turn, he glanced up at the farm where
shoulder of the
hill,
and something
it
its
axle to
make
squatted on the gaunt
gleam shone in his team again, watching the crooked
like a possessive
But he only turned his passage of the scranlet through the yeasty earth, and muttered: "Hola, dull eyes.
Arsenic! Belay there. Travail!" while the bitter light
waned
into full day.
Stella
Gibbons
125
Because of the peculiar formation of the outhouses surrounding the farm, the light was always longer in reaching the yard than the rest of the house. Long after the sunlight was shining through the cobwebs
on the uppermost windows of the old house the yard was
in
damp
blue
shadow. It
was
shadow now, but sharp gleams sprang from the ranged
in
milk-buckets along the ford-piece outside the cowshed.
Leaving the house by the back door, you came up sharply against
running right across the yard, and turning abruptly,
a stone wall
angles, just before
it
at right
reached the shed where the bull was housed, and
running down to the gate leading out into the ragged garden where mallows, dog's-body, and wild turnip were running riot. The bull's shed abutted upon the right corner of the dairy, which faced the cowsheds.
The cowsheds faced the house, but the back door faced the bull's shed. From here a long-roofed barn extended the whole length of the octangle until
it
reached the front door of the house. Here
it
took a quick turn,
and ended. The dairy was awkwardly placed; it had been a thorn in the side of old Fig Starkadder, the last owner of the farm, who had died three years ago. The dairy overlooked the front door, in face of the extreme point of
triangle
its
which formed the ancient buildings of the farm-
house.
From
the dairy a wall extended which formed the right-hand
boundary of the octangle, joining the bull's shed and the pig-pens at the extreme end of the right point of the triangle. A staircase, put in to make it more difficult, ran parallel with the octangle, halfway round the yard, against the wall which led down to the garden gate. The spurt and regular ping! of milk against metal came from the reeking interior of the sheds. The bucket was pressed between Adam Lambsbreath's knees, and his head was pressed deep into the flank of Feckless, the big Jersey. His gnarled hands mechanically stroked the teat, while a low crooning, mindless as the Down wind itself, came from his lips.
He was
asleep.
He had been awake
all
over the indifferent bare shoulders of the little
flower Elfine.
.
.
night,
Downs
wandering
in
thought
after his wild bird, his
.
The name, unspoken but
sharply musical as a glittering
bead shaken from a fountain's tossing necklace, hovered audibly
in the
rancid air of the shed.
The
beasts stood with heads lowered dejectedly against the
hoot-pieces of their
stalls.
wooden
Graceless, Pointless, Feckless, and Aimless
awaited their turn to be milked. Sometimes Aimless ran her dry tongue,
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
126
with a rasping sound sharp as a
file
awkwardly across the moist with the rain that had fallen
through
silk,
bony flank of Feckless, which was still upon it through the roof during the night, or Pointless turned her large dull eyes sideways as she swung her head upwards to tear down a mouthful of cobwebs from the wooden runnet above her head. A lowering, moist, steamy light, almost like that which gleams below the eyelids of a
man
in fever, filled the
cowshed.
Suddenly a tortured bellow, a blaring welter of sound that shattered the quiescence of the morning, tore its way across the yard and died away in a croak that was almost a sob. It was Big Business, the bull,
wakening
to another day, in the
clammy darkness
The sound woke Adam. He
lifted his
of his
cell.
head from the flank of Feck-
and looked around him in bewilderment for a moment; then slowly his eyes, which looked small and wet and lifeless in his primitive face, lost their terror as he realized that he was in the cowshed, that it was half-past six on a winter morning, and that his gnarled fingers were about the task which they had performed at this hour and in this place for the less
past eighty years or more.
He
stood up, sighing, and crossed over to Pointless,
Graceless's
tail.
Adam, who was
linked to
all
dumb
who was
eating
brutes by a chain
and sweat, took it out of her mouth and put into it, instead, the last he had. She mumbled it, while he milked her, his neckerchief but stealthily spat it out as soon as he passed on to Aimless, and concealed it under the reeking straw with her hoof. She did not want to hurt the old man's feelings by declining to eat his gift. There was a close bond: a slow, deep, primitive, silent down-dragging link between Adam and all living beasts; they knew each other's simple needs. They lay close to the earth, and something of earth's old fierce simplicities had seeped into forged in
soil
—
their beings.
Suddenly a shadow fell athwart the wooden stanchions of the door. It was no more than a darkening of the pallid paws of the day which were now embracing the shed, but all the cows instinctively stiffened, and Adam's eyes, as he stood up to face the newcomer, were again piteously full
of twisted fear.
"Adam," uttered the woman who stood pails
in the
doorway, "how
many
of milk will there be this morning?" "I
dunnamany," responded Adam,
cringingly; " 'tes hard to
so be as our Pointless has got over her indigestion,
maybe
'twill
tell.
If
be four.
maybe three." Judith Starkadder made an impatient movement. Her large hands had a quality which made them seem to sketch vast horizons with their If
so be as she hain't,
Stella
slightest gesture.
She looked
a
Gibbons
woman
127
without boundaries as she stood
wrapped in a crimson shawl to protect her hitter, magnificent shoulders from the splintery cold of the early air. She seemed fitted for any stage, however enormous. "Well, get as many buckets as you can," she said, lifelessly, halfturning away. "Mrs. Starkadder questioned
me
about the milk yesterday.
She has been comparing our output with that from other farms in the district, and she says we are five-sixteenths of a bucket below what our rate should be, considering how many cows we have." A strange film passed over Adam's eyes, giving him the lifeless primeval look that a lizard has, basking in the swooning Southern heat. But he said nothing. "And another thing," continued Judith, "you will probably have to drive down into Beershorn tonight to meet a train. Robert Poste's child is coming to stay with us for a while. I expect to hear some time this morning what time she is arriving. I will tell you later about it." Adam shrank back against the gangrened flank of Pointless. "Mun I?" he asked piteously. "Mun I, Miss Judith? Oh, dunna send me. How can I look into her liddle flower-face, and me knowin' what I know? Oh, Miss Judith, I beg of ee not to send me. Besides," he added, more practically, " 'tes close on sixty-five years since I put hands to a pair of reins, and I might upset the maidy." Judith, who had slowly turned from him while he was speaking, was now halfway across the yard. She turned her head to reply to him with a slow, graceful movement. Her deep voice clanged like a bell in the frosty
air:
"No, you must go, Adam. You must forget what you know
as
we
you had best harness Viper to the trap, and drive down into Howling and back six times this afternoon, to get your hand in again." "Could not Master Seth go instead o' me?" Emotion shook the frozen grief of her face. She said low and sharp: "You remember what happened when he went to meet the new kitchenmaid No. You must go." Adam's eyes, like blind pools of water in his primitive face, suddenly grew cunning. He turned back to Aimless and resumed his mechanical all
must, while she
.
.
is
here.
As
—
for the driving,
.
stroking of the teat, saying in a sing-song rhythm:
dunnamany times I've thought as how this day might come And now I mun go to bring Robert Poste's child back to Cold Comfort. Aye, 'tes strange. The seed to the flower, "Ay, then
I'll
go. Miss Judith. .
the flower to the
fruit,
.
I
.
the fruit to the belly. Aye, so
'twill
go."
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
128
muck and
Judith had crossed the
rabble of the yard, and
now
en-
tered the house by the back door.
which occupied most of the middle of the house, a sullen fire burned, the smoke of which wavered up the blackened walls and over the deal table, darkened by age and dirt, which was roughly set for a meal. A snood full of coarse porridge hung over the fire, and standing with one arm resting upon the high mantel, looking moodily down into the heaving contents of the snood, was a tall young man whose riding boots were splashed with mud to the thigh, and whose coarse linen shirt was open to his waist. The firelight lit up his diaphragm muscles as they heaved slowly in rough rhythm with the porridge. He looked up as Judith entered, and gave a short, defiant laugh, In the large kitchen,
but said nothing. Judith crossed slowly over until she stood by his
She was
down
They
as tall as he.
side.
stood in silence, she staring at him, and he
into the secret crevasses of the porridge.
"Well,
would be
mother mine," he
in time for breakfast,
said at last, "here
and
I
have kept
am, you
I
my
see.
said
I
I
word."
His voice had a low, throaty, animal quality, a sneering warmth that
wound
a velvet ribbon of sexuality over the outward coarseness of
the man.
came
Judith's breath
into her shawl.
The
in
long shudders. She thrust her arms deeper
porridge gave an ominous leering heave;
almost have been endowed with
human
keep pace with the
"Cur," said Judith,
were you with
passions that throbbed above
levelly, at last.
"Coward!
its
might
movements
it.
Liar! Libertine!
Who
night? Moll at the mill or Violet at the vicarage?
last
Ivy, perhaps, at the
ironmongery? Seth
voice quivered, but she whipped
him
so uncannily did
life,
it
it
— my
Or
son ..." Her deep, dry
back, and her next words flew out at
like a lash.
"Do you want
to break
my
heart?"
"Yes," said Seth, with an elemental simplicity.
The
porridge boiled over.
Judith knelt, and hastily and absently ladled into the snood, biting back her tears.
it
off the floor
back
While she was thus engaged, there
was a confused blur of voices and boots in the yard outside. The men were coming in to breakfast. The meal for the men was set on a long trestle at the farther end of the kitchen, as far away from the
room
in
awkward
little
fire as possible.
They came
into the
clumps, eleven of them. Five were distant cousins
of the Starkadders, and two others were half-brothers of Amos, Judith's
husband. This
left
only four
men who
were not
in
some way connected
Stella
with the family; so
among
it
will readily
Gibbons
be understood that the general feeling
the farm-hands was not exactly one of
of the four, had been heard to remark: o'
hilarity.
"Happen
eleven, us might ha' had a cricket team, wi'
more
'twould be at
129
befittin' if
we was
to hire
it
Mark Dolour, one
had been another kind
me
for
umpire. As ut
is,
oursen out for carrying coffins
sixpence a mile."
The
and the two half-brothers came over to the table, for they took their meals with the family. Amos liked to have his kith about him, though, of course, he never said so or cheered up when five half-cousins
they were.
A
strong family likeness wavered in and out of the fierce, earth-
reddened faces of the seven,
like a
mightiest of the cousins, was a ruined giant of a
knee and
wrist.
Micah Starkadder, man, paralysed in one
capricious light.
His nephew, Urk, was a
little,
red, hard-bitten
man
with
same physical type, but horsy where Urk was foxy. Caraway, a silent man, wind-shaven and lean, with long wandering fingers, had some of Seth's animal grace, and this had been passed on to his son, Harkaway, a young, silent, nervous man given to bursts of fury about very little, when you came to sift matters. Amos's half-brothers, Luke and Mark, were thickly built and highfeatured; gross, silent men with an eye to the bed and the board. foxy ears. Urk's brother, Ezra, was of the
When
all
Amos
Starkadder and his eldest son, Reuben,
were seated two shadows darkened the sharp, cold light pouring in through the door. They were no more than a growing imminence of humanity, but the porridge boiled over again.
came
into the
kitchen.
Amos, who was even silently
put his
fender, while
down
and more of a wreck than Micah, pruning-snoot and reaping-hook in a corner by the larger
Reuben put the
scranlet with
which he had been ploughing
beside them.
The two men took
their places in silence,
and
after
Amos had
muttered a long and fervent grace, the meal was eaten in silence. Seth sat moodily tying and untying a green scarf round the magnificent throat
he had inherited from Judith; he did not touch only
made
his porridge,
and Judith
a pretence of eating hers, playing with her spoon, patting the
porridge up and
down and
idly building castles
with the burnt
bits.
Her
eyes burned under their penthouses, sometimes straying towards Seth as
manhood, with a good many buttons and tapes undone. Then those same eyes, dark as prisoned kingcobras, would slide round until they rested upon the bitter white head and raddled red neck of Amos, her husband, and then, like praying he
sat sprawling in the lusty pride of casual
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
130
mantises, they would retreat between their
mouth. Suddenly Amos, looking up from
lids.
Secrecy pouted her
full
his food, asked abruptly:
"Where's Elfine?"
"She
is
not up
yet.
I
wake
did not
She hinders more than she
her.
helps o' mornings," replied Judith.
Amos
grunted.
" 'Tes a
godless habit to
lie
abed of a working day, and the reeking
red pits of the Lord's eternal wrathy
fires lie in
them as do so. upon Seth, who
wait for
—
Aye" his blue blazing eyes swivelled round and rested was stealthily looking at a packet of Parisian art pictures under the table "aye, and for those who break the seventh commandment, too. And for those" the eye rested on Reuben, who was hopefully studying his "for those as waits for dead men's parent's apoplectic countenance
—
—
—
shoes."
"Nay, Amos, lad
—
"
remonstrated Micah, heavily.
"Hold your peace," thundered Amos; and Micah, though a fierce tremor rushed through his mighty form, held it. When the meal was done the hands trooped out to get on with the day's work of harvesting the swedes. This harvest was now in full swing; it
took a long time and was very difficult to do.
The
Starkadders, too,
and went out into the thin rain which had begun to fall. They were engaged in digging a well beside the dairy; it had been started a year ago, but it was taking a long time to do because things kept on going wrong. Once a terrible day, when Nature seemed to hold her breath, and Harkaway had fallen into it. release it again in a furious gale of wind Once Urk had pushed Caraway down it. Still, it was nearly finished; and everybody felt that it would not be long now. In the middle of the morning a wire came from London announcing that the expected visitor would arrive by the six o'clock train. Judith received it alone. Long after she had read it she stood motionless, the rain driving through the open door against her crimson rose
—
shawl.
—
Then
slowly, with dragging steps,
she mounted the staircase
upper part of the house. Over her shoulder she old Adam, who had come into the room to do the washing up:
which
led to the
"Robert Poste's child Beershorn.
You must
will
leave to
be here by the
meet
it
at five.
I
am
six
said to
o'clock train
going up to
tell
at
Mrs.
coming today." Adam did not reply, and Seth, sitting by the fire, was growing tired of looking at his postcards, which were a three-year-old gift from the vicar's son, with whom he occasionally went poaching. He knew them Starkadder that she
is
Stella
by now. Meriam, the hired
Gibbons
131
would not be in until after dinner. When she came, she would avoid his eyes, and tremble and weep. He laughed insolently, triumphantly. Undoing another button of his shirt, he lounged out across the yard to the shed where Big Business, the bull, was imprisoned in darkness. Laughing softly, Seth struck the door of the shed. And as though answering the deep call of male to male, the bull uttered a loud tortured bellow that rose undefeated through the dead sky that brooded over the farm. Seth undid yet another button, and lounged away. all
girl,
•
Adam
Lambsbreath, alone
at the dirtied plates,
•
•
in the kitchen, stood looking
which
it
was
his task to
down
unseeingly
wash, for the hired
girl,
Meriam, would not be here until after dinner, and when she came she would be all but useless. Her hour was near at hand, as all Howling knew. Was it not February, and the earth a-teem with newing life? A grin twisted Adam's writhen lips. He gathered up the plates one by one and carried them to the pump, which stood in a corner of the kitchen, above a stone sink. Her hour was nigh. And when April like an over-lustful lover leaped upon the lush flanks of the Downs there would be yet another child in the wretched hut down at Nettle Flitch Field, where Meriam housed the fruits of her shame. "Aye, dog's-fennel or beard's-crow, by their
fruits
they shall be
Adam, shooting a stream of cold water over the "Come cloud, come sun, 'tes ay so."
betrayed," muttered
coagulated plates.
While he was
listlessly
dabbing
plates with a thorn twig, a soft step
which closed
off the staircase
at the crusted
descended the
edges of the porridgestairs
outside the door
from the kitchen. Someone paused on the
threshold.
The
step was light as thistledown. If
Adam had
not had the rush of
him
be able to hear any
the running water in his ears too loudly for
to
other noise, he might have thought this delicate, hesitant step was the beating of his
own
blood.
But, suddenly, something like a kingfisher streaked across the
glimmer of green skirts and flying gold hair and the chime of a laugh was followed a second later by the slam of the gate leading through the starveling garden out on to the Downs. Adam flung round violently on hearing the sound, dropping his thorn twig and breaking two plates. "Elfine my little bird," he whispered, starting towards the open kitchen, in a
.
door.
.
.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
132
A
brittle silence
mocked
his whisper;
through
it
wound
the rank
odours of rattan and barn.
"My
pharisee
.
.
.
my
cowdling
.
.
."he whispered
piteously. His
eyes had again that look as of waste grey pools, sightless primeval wastes reflecting the
wan evening
sky in
some
lonely marsh, as they
wandered
about the kitchen. His hands
fell
slackly against his sides,
and he dropped another
plate. It broke.
and began to move slowly towards the open door, his task forgotten. His eyes were fixed upon the cowshed. ."he muttered, dully; "the dumb beasts never "Aye, the beasts fail a man. They know. Aye, I'd 'a' done better to cowdle our Feckless in
He
sighed,
.
my bosom And
.
than liddle Elfine. Aye, wild as a marsh-tigget in May,
'tes.
word from anyone. Well, so 't must be. Sour the blind grey pools or sweet, by barn or bye, so 'twill go. Ah, but if he" grew suddenly terrible, as though a storm were blowing in across the marsh from the Atlantic wastes "if he but harms a hair o' her little goldy head I'll kill un." So muttering, he crossed the yard and entered the cowshed, where he untied the beasts from their hoot-pieces and drove them across the yard, down the muddy rutted lane that led to Nettle Flitch Field. He was enmeshed in his grief. He did not notice that Graceless's leg had come off and that she was managing as best she could with three. Left alone, the kitchen fire went out. a will never listen to a
—
—
Waugh
Evelyn
WINNER TAKES ALL
1
When
Mrs. Kent-Cumberland's eldest son was born
London nursing home) sumed three barrels of things turned out loyal tenantry
of Tomb
—
there was a bonfire on tar,
(in
Tomb
an expensive
Beacon;
it
an immense catafalque of timber, and,
for the flames spread briskly in the dry gorse
were too
con-
tipsy to extinguish
them
— the
as
and
entire vegetation
Hill.
mother and child could be moved, they travelled in state to the country, where flags were hung out in the village street and a trellis arch of evergreen boughs obscured the handsome Palladian entrance gates of their home. There were farmers' dinners both at Tomb and on the Kent-Cumberlands' Norfolk estate, and funds for a silverplated tray were ungrudgingly subscribed. The christening was celebrated by a garden-party. A princess stood godmother by proxy, and the boy was called Gervase Peregrine Mountjoy St. Eustace all of them names illustrious in the family's history. Throughout the service and the subsequent presentations he maintained an attitude of phlegmatic dignity which confirmed everyone in the high estimate they had already formed of his capabilities. After the garden-party there were fireworks and after the fireworks a very hard week for the gardeners, cleaning up the mess. The life of the Kent-Cumberlands then resumed its normal tranquillity until nearly two years later, when, much to her annoyance, Mrs. Kent-Cumberland discovered that she was to have another baby. The second child was born in August in a shoddy modern house on the East Coast which had been taken for the summer so that Gervase might have the benefit of sea air. Mrs. Kent-Cumberland was attended As soon
as
—
BESTOFMODERN HUMOR
THE
134
who antagonized her by his middle-class accent, and came to the point, a great deal more deft than the
by the local doctor,
when
proved,
it
London specialist. Throughout the peevish months of waiting Mrs. Kent-Cumberland had fortified herself with the hope that she would have a daughter. It would be a softening influence for Gervase, who was growing up somewhat unresponsive, to have a pretty, gentle, sympathetic sister two years younger than himself. She would come out just when he was going up to Oxford and would save him from either of the dreadful extremes of the bookevil company which threatened that stage of development worm and the hooligan. She would bring down delightful girls for Eights Week and Commem. Mrs. Kent-Cumberland had it all planned out. When she was delivered of another son she named him Thomas, and fretted through her convalescence with her mind on the coming hunting
—
season.
2
The two was
little
age.
brothers developed into sturdy, unremarkable to
choose between them except their two
They were both
little
boys; there
years' difference in
sandy-haired, courageous, and well-mannered
occasions. Neither was sensitive,
artistic,
on
highly strung, or conscious of
being misunderstood. Both accepted the fact of Gervase's importance just as
they accepted his superiority of knowledge and physique. Mrs.
Kent-Cumberland was
a fair-minded
being involved in mischief,
more
severely punished.
advantageous, for
it
of ceremony which
it
Tom
woman, and
was Gervase,
found that
in the event of the
two
who was
the
as the elder,
his obscurity
was on the whole
excused him from the countless minor performances fell
on Gervase. 3
Tom
was consumed with desire for a model motorcar, an expensive toy of a size to sit in and pedal about the garden. He prayed for it steadfastly every evening and most mornings for several At the age of seven
weeks. Christmas was approaching.
Gervase had a smart pony and was often taken hunting. Tom was alone most of the day and the motor-car occupied a great part of his thoughts. Finally he confided his ambition to an uncle. This uncle was not addicted to expensive present giving, least of
was a his
man
all
to children (for
he
of limited means and self-indulgent habits), but something in
nephew's intensity of feeling impressed him. "Poor
little
beggar," he reflected, "his brother seems to get
all
the
Evelyn
Waugh
135
when he returned to London he ordered the motor-car for Tom. It arrived some days before Christmas and was put away upstairs with other presents. On Christmas Eve Mrs. Kent-Cumberland came to fun," and
inspect them.
"how very
"How
very kind," she said, looking at each label in turn,
kind."
The motor-car was by complete with
electric lights, a hooter
"Really," she said.
He's
far the largest exhibit.
"How
Then she looked at put Tom's name on "There was
this
and
was pillar-box red,
It
a spare wheel.
very kind of Ted."
more
the label
"But
closely.
how
foolish of him.
it."
book
for
Master Gervase,"
said the nurse, produc-
volume labelled "Gervase with best wishes from Uncle Ted." "Of course the parcels have been confused at the shop," said Mrs. Kent-Cumberland. "This can't have been meant for Tom. Why, it must ing a
have cost
six
or seven pounds."
She changed the
and went downstairs to supervise the decoration of the Christmas tree, glad to have rectified an obvious error of labels
justice.
Next morning, the presents were revealed. "Oh, Ger. You lucky," said
Tom,
inspecting the motor-car.
"Yes, only be careful.
Tom
rode
it
Nanny
says
it
"May
are
ride in it?"
I
was awfully expensive."
"May
twice round the room.
I
take
it
in the
garden
sometimes?" "Yes.
You can have
it
when
I'm hunting."
Later in the week they wrote to thank their uncle for his presents.
Gervase wrote:
Dear Uncle Ted, Thank you for the well.
I
am
lovely present.
going to hunt again before
It's I
lovely.
The pony
is
very
go back to school.
Love from Gervase.
Dear Uncle Ted [wrote Tom], Thank you ever so much for
the lovely present.
It is
just
what
I
wanted. Again thanking you very much.
With love from Tom. "So
that's all the
thanks
I
get.
Ungrateful
Ted, resolving to be more economical
But when Gervase went back motor-car,
Tom,
"What,
for
to keep."
my own?"
little
beggar," said Uncle
in future.
to school
he
said,
"You can have the
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
136
"Yes.
It's
And by for
him
a kid's toy, anyway."
this act of generosity
he increased Tom's respect and love
a hundredfold.
4
The war came and profoundly changed
the lives of the two boys.
engendered none of the neuroses threatened by
pacifists.
It
Air raids re-
mained among Tom's happiest memories, when the school used to be awakened in the middle of the night and hustled downstairs to the basement where, wrapped in eiderdowns, they were regaled with cocoa and cake by the matron,
who
looked supremely ridiculous in a flannel night-
gown. Once a Zeppelin was
hit in sight of the school;
they
all
crowded
windows to see it sinking slowly in a globe of pink flame. A very young master whose health rendered him unfit for military service danced on the headmaster's tennis court crying, "There go the baby to the dormitory
Tom made
killers."
German
a collection of
"War
Relics," including a captured
helmet, shell-splinters. The Times for August 4th, 1914, but-
tons, cartridge cases,
and cap badges, that was voted the best
in the
school.
The event which was the death, early
were
at
changed the relationship of the brothers
in 1915, of their father.
particularly liked him.
Commons and
radically
spent
He had represented the division in the House of much of his time in London while the children
Tomb. They only saw him on
army. Gervase and
Neither knew him well nor
Tom
three occasions after he joined the
were called out of the classroom and told of
death by the headmaster's wife. They cried, since
them, and
some days were
for
treated with
it
his
was expected of
marked deference by the
masters and the rest of the school. It
was
in the
subsequent holidays that the importance of the change
became apparent. Mrs. Kent-Cumberland had suddenly become more emotional and more parsimonious. She was liable to unprecedented outbursts of tears,
when she would crush Gervase
fatherless boy."
to her
and
say,
"My poor
At other times she spoke gloomily of death duties.
5
For some years
^^
in fact
"Death Duties" became the
refrain of the house-
hold.
When down
Mrs. Kent-Cumberland
let
the house in
London and
closed
Tomb, when she reduced the servants to four and the gardeners to two, when she "let the flower gardens go," when she stopped asking her brother Ted to stay, when she emptied the stables, and bea
wing
at
Evelyn
Waugh
137
when the bath water was cold and there were no new tennis-balls, when the chimneys were dirty and the lawns covered with sheep, when Gervase's cast-off clothes ceased to fit Tom, when she refused him the "extra" expense at came almost
fanatical in her reluctance to use the car,
school of carpentry lessons and mid-morning milk
— "Death
Duties"
were responsible. "It
all
is
"When he
Kent-Cumberland used
for Gervase," Mrs.
inherits,
he must take over
to explain.
free of debt, as his father did."
6
Gervase went to Eton in the year of normally have followed him two years
economy Mrs. Kent-Cumberland
Tom
his father's death. later,
but in her
would
new mood of
cancelled his entry and began canvass-
ing her friends' opinions about the less famous, cheaper public schools.
"The education
just as
is
good," she
said,
"and
far
more
suitable for a
boy who has his own way to make in the world." Tom was happy enough at the school to which he was sent. It was very bleak and very new, salubrious, progressive, prosperous in the boom that secondary education enjoyed in the years immediately following the war, and, when all was said and done, "thoroughly suitable for a boy with his
own way
to
he was not allowed
House colours ond eleven for
for
make
in the world."
to invite to his
swimming and
home fives,
He had
several friends
whom
He
got his
during the holidays.
played once or twice in the sec-
and was a platoon commander in the O.T.C.; he was in the sixth form and passed the Higher Certificate in his last year, became a prefect and enjoyed the confidence of his house master, who spoke of him as "a very decent stamp of boy." He left school at the age of eighteen without the smallest desire to re-visit it or see any of its
members
cricket,
again.
Gervase was then at Christ Church. Tom went up to visit him, but the magnificent Etonians who romped in and out of his brother's rooms scared and depressed him. Gervase was in the Bullingdon, spending money freely and enjoying himself. He gave a dinner-party in his rooms, but Tom sat in silence, drinking heavily to hide his embarrassment, and
was
later
Tomb
sombrely sick
in a
next day in the lowest
corner of Peckwater quad.
He
returned to
spirits.
Tom
were a scholarly boy," said Mrs. KentCumberland to her friends. "I am glad he is not, of course. But if he had been, it might have been right to make the sacrifice and send him to the "It
is
University.
not as though
As
it is,
the sooner he Gets Started the better."
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
138
7
Getting
Tom
however, proved a matter of some
started,
difficulty.
Dur-
Death Duty Period, Mrs. Kent-Cumberland had cut herself off from many of her friends. Now she cast round vainly to find someone who would "put Tom into something." Chartered Accountancy, Chinese Customs, estate agencies, "the City," were suggested and abandoned. "The trouble is that he has no particular abilities," she explained. "He is the sort of boy who would be useful in anything an all-round man but, of course, he has no capital." August, September, October passed; Gervase was back at Oxford, in fashionable lodgings in the High Street, but Tom remained at home without employment. Day by day he and his mother sat down together to luncheon and dinner, and his constant presence was a severe strain on Mrs. Kent-Cumberland's equability. She herself was always busy and, as she bustled about her duties, it shocked and distracted her to encounter the large figure of her younger son sprawling on the morning-room sofa or leaning against the stone parapet of the terrace and gazing out ing the
—
apathetically across the familiar landscape. •
"Why can't you
•
•
would complain. "There are always things to do about a house. Heaven knows I never have a moment." And when, one afternoon, he was asked out by some neighbours and returned too late to dress for dinner, she said, "Really, Tom, I should have thought that you had time for that." "It is a very serious thing," she remarked on another occasion, "for a young man of your age to get out of the habit of work. It saps his whole find
something
to do?" she
morale."
back upon the ancient country house expedient of Cataloguing the Library. This consisted of an extensive and dusty collection of books amassed by succeeding generations of a family at no time notable for their patronage of literature; it had been catalogued Accordingly she
fell
before, in the middle of the nineteenth century, in the spidery, spinsterish
hand of a
relative in
reduced circumstances; since then the additions
and disturbances had been negligible, but Mrs. Kent-Cumberland purchased a fumed oak cabinet and several boxes of cards and instructed Tom how she wanted the shelves re-numbered and the books twice entered under Subject and Author. •
•
•
was a system that should keep a boy employed for some time, and it was with vexation, therefore, that, a few days after the task was commenced, she paid a surprise visit to the scene of his labour and found It
Evelyn
Tom
Waugh
139
almost lying, in an armchair, with his feet on a rung of the
sitting,
library steps, reading.
am
you have found something interesting," she said in a voice that conveyed very little gladness. "Well, to tell you the truth, I think I have," said Tom, and showed "I
glad
her the book.
was the manuscript journal kept by a Colonel Jasper Cumberland during the Peninsular War. It had no startling literary merit, nor did its criticisms of the general staff throw any new light upon the strategy of It
was a lively, direct, day-to-day narrative, redolent of its period; there was a sprinkling of droll anecdotes, some vigorous descriptions of fox-hunting behind the lines of Torres Vedras, of the Duke of Wellington dining in Mess, of a threatened mutiny that had not yet found its way into history, of the assault on Badajoz; there were some the campaign, but
bawdy references
to
it
Portuguese
women and some pious
reflections
about
patriotism. "I "I
show
it
might be worth publishing," said Tom. should hardly think so," replied his mother. "But I will certainly to Gervase when he comes home."
was wondering
if it
For the moment the discovery gave a new interest to Tom's life. He read up the history of the period and of his own family. Jasper Cumberland he established as a younger son of the period, who had later emigrated to Canada. There were letters from him among the archives, including the announcement of his marriage to a Papist, which had clearly severed the link with his elder brother. In a case of
uncatalogued
miniatures in the long drawing-room, he found the portrait of a hand-
some whiskered was able
soldier,
which by
a study of
contemporary uniforms he
to identify as the diarist.
immature handwriting, Tom began working up his notes into an essay. His mother watched his efforts with unqualified approval. She was glad to see him busy, and glad to see him taking an interest in his family's history. She had begun to fear that by Presently, in his round,
sending him to a school without "tradition" she might have
When,
made
a
work was found for Tom, she took charge of his notes. "I am sure Gervase will be extremely interested," she said. "He may even think it worth showing socialist
of the boy.
shortly before the Christmas vacation,
to a publisher."
8
The work but, as his
had been found for Tom was not immediately lucrative, mother said, it was a beginning. It was to go to Wolverhamp-
that
THE
140
BESTOFMODERN HUMOR
ton and learn the motor business from the bottom.
The
first
two years
from where, if he showed talent, he might graduate to the London showrooms. His wages, at first, were thirty-five shillings a week. This was augmented by the allowance of another pound. Lodgings were found for him over a fruit shop in the outskirts of were
to
be spent
at the works,
him
which he could travel to and from his work, and for occasional weekends home. It was during one of these visits that Gervase told him the good news that a London publisher had read the diary and seen possibilities in it. Six months later it appeared under the title The Journal of an English Cavalry Officer during the Peninsular War. Edited with notes and a biographical introduction by Gervase Kent-Cumberland. The miniature portrait was prettily reproduced as a frontispiece, there was a collotype copy of a page of the original manuscript, a contemporary print of Tomb Park, and a map of the campaign. It sold nearly two thousand copies at twelve and sixpence and received two or three respectful reviews in the Saturday and Sunday papers. the town, and Gervase gave
his old two-seater car, in
•
The appearance
•
•
of the Journal coincided within a few days with
Gervase's twenty-first birthday.
The
celebrations were extravagant
and
prolonged, culminating in a ball at which Tom's attendance was required.
He
drove over, after the works had shut down, and arrived,
just in
time for dinner, to find a house-party of thirty and a house entirely transformed.
His
own room had been
taken for a guest ("as you
will
only be here
one night," his mother explained). He was sent down to the Cumberland Arms, where he dressed by candlelight in a breathless little bedroom over the bar, and arrived late and slightly dishevelled at dinner, where he sat between two lovely girls who neither knew who he was nor troubled to inquire. The dancing afterwards was in a marquee built on the terrace, which a London catering firm had converted into a fair replica of a Pont Street drawing-room. Tom danced once or twice with the daughters of neighbouring families whom he had known since childhood. They asked him about Wolverhampton and the works. He had to get up early next morning; at midnight he slipped away to his bed at the inn. The evening had bored him; because he was in love. for
9 It
had occurred
him to ask his mother whether he might bring his but on reflexion, enchanted as he was, he had realized
to
fiancee to the ball,
Evelyn
Waugh
141
was named Gladys Cruttwell. She was two years older than himself; she had fluffy yellow hair which she washed at home once a week and dried before the gas fire; on the day after the that
it
would not do. The
shampoo and
it
slightly
girl
and silky; towards the end of the week, darker greasy. She was a virtuous, affectionate, self-reliant, even-
was very
light
tempered, unintelligent, high-spirited
girl,
but
Tom
could not disguise
from himself the fact that she would not go down well at Tomb. She worked for the firm on the clerical side. Tom had noticed her on his second day, as she tripped across the yard, exactly on time, bare-
headed (the day after a shampoo) in a woollen coat and skirt which she had knitted herself. He had got into conversation with her in the canteen, by making way for her at the counter with a chivalry that was not
much
practised at the works. His possession of a car gave
advantage over the other young
men
They discovered that they and it presently became Tom's
lived within a
him
a clear
about the place. few
streets
of one another,
practice to call for her in the mornings
and take her home in the evenings. He would sit in the two-seater outside her gate, sound the horn, and she would come running down the path to meet him. As summer approached they went for drives in the evening among leafy Warwickshire lanes. In June they were engaged. Tom was exhilarated, sometimes almost dizzy at the experience, but he hesitated to tell his mother. "After all," he reflected, "it is not as though I were Gervase," but in his own heart he knew that there would be trouble. Gladys came of a class accustomed to long engagements; marriage seemed a remote prospect; an engagement to her signified the formal recognition that she and Tom spent their spare time in one another's company. Her mother, with whom she lived, accepted him on these terms. In years to come, when Tom had got his place in the London showrooms, it would be time enough to think about marrying. But Tom was born to a less patient tradition. He began to speak about a wedding
autumn. "It would be lovely," said Gladys in the tones she would have employed about winning the Irish sweepstake. He had spoken very little about his family. She understood, vaguely, that they lived in a big house, but it was a part of life that never had been real to her. She knew that there were duchesses and marchionesses in something called "Society"; they were encountered in the pain the
She knew there were directors with large salaries; but the fact that there were people like Gervase or Mrs. Kent-Cumberland, and that they would think of themselves as radically different from herself, had not entered her experience. When, eventually, they were
pers and the films.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
142
brought together Mrs. Kent-Cumberland was extremely gracious and Gladys thought her a very nice old lady. But Tom knew that the meeting
was proving disastrous.
"Of course,"
Kent-Cumberland, "the whole thing is quite impossible. Miss Whatever-her-name-was seemed a thoroughly nice girl, but you are not in a position to think of marriage. Besides," she added with absolute finality, "you must not forget that if anything were to happen to Gervase you would be his heir. So Tom was removed from the motor business and an opening found for him on a sheep farm in South Australia. said Mrs.
10
would not be fair to say that in the ensuing two years Mrs. KentCumberland forgot her younger son. She wrote to him every month and sent him bandana handkerchiefs for Christmas. In the first lonely days he wrote to her frequently, but when, as he grew accustomed to the new It
life,
his letters
When
became
less
frequent she did not seriously miss them.
they did arrive they were lengthy; she put them aside from her
correspondence to read
at leisure and,
more than once,
unopened. But whenever her acquaintances asked answered, "Doing splendidly.
And
after
mislaid them,
Tom
she loyally
enjoying himself very much."
She had many other things to occupy and, in some cases, distress her. Gervase was now in authority at Tomb, and the careful regime of his minority wholly reversed. There were six expensive hunters in the stable. The lawns were mown, bedrooms thrown open, additional bathrooms installed; there was even talk of constructing a swimming pool. There was constant Saturday to Monday entertaining. There was the sale, at a poor price, of two Romneys and a Hoppner. Mrs. Kent-Cumberland watched all this with mingled pride and anxiety. In particular she scrutinized the succession of girls stay,
in the irreconcilable,
who came
to
ever-present fears that Gervase would or
would not marry. Either conclusion seemed perilous; a wife for Gervase must be well-born, well conducted, rich, of stainless reputation, and affectionately disposed to Mrs. Kent-Cumberland; such a mate seemed difficult to find. The estate was clear of the mortgages necessitated by death duties, but dividends were uncertain, and though, as she frequently pointed out, she "never interfered," simple arithmetic and her
own
close experience of domestic
management convinced her
that Ger-
vase would not long be able to support the scale of living which he had
introduced.
With so much on her mind,
it
was inevitable that Mrs. Kent-Cum-
Evelyn
Waugh
berland should think a great deal about
143
Tomb and very little about
South
and should be rudely shocked to read in one of Tom's letters that he was proposing to return to England on a visit, with a fiancee and a future father-in-law; that in fact he had already started, was now on the sea and due to arrive in London in a fortnight. Had she read his earlier letters with attention she might have found hints of such an attachment, but she had not done so, and the announcement came to Australia,
her as a wholly unpleasant surprise.
"Your brother
"Oh
good!
"He
is
is
coming back."
When?"
They want
the farmer.
whom
bringing a farmer's daughter to to
come
he
is
engaged
— and
here."
"I say, that's rather a bore. Let's tell
them we're having the
boilers
cleaned."
"You
seem to realize that this is a serious matter, Gervase." "Oh well, you fix things up. I dare say it would be all right if they came next month. We've got to have the Anchorages some time. We don't
might get both over together.
was decided that Gervase would meet the immigrants London, vet them and report to his mother whether or no they were
end
In the
in
it
suitable fellow-guests for the Anchorages.
Tomb,
his
A
week
later,
on
his return to
mother greeted him anxiously.
"Well?
You never
"Wrote?
Why
wrote?"
should
I?
I
never do.
I
say,
I
haven't forgotten a
birthday or anything, have I?"
"Don't be absurd, Gervase.
I
mean, about your brother Tom's un-
fortunate entanglement. Did you see the girl?"
"Oh,
that. Yes,
I
went and had dinner with them. Tom's done
himself quite well. Fair, rather say,
fat,
saucer-eyes, good-tempered,
I
should
by her looks."
"Does she
— does she speak with an Australian accent?"
"Didn't notice
it."
"And the father?" "Pompous old boy." "Would he be all right with the Anchorages?" "I
They
should think he'd go
are staying with the
"Indeed!
What an
down
like a dinner.
Chasms." extraordinary thing.
Chasm was Governor-General once. respectable. Where are they staying?" "Claridge's."
But they can't come.
Still, it
But, of course, Archie
shows they must be
fairly
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
144
"Then they must be
How
quite rich, too.
very interesting.
I
will
write this evening."
11
Three weeks later they arrived. Mr. MacDougal, the father, was a tall, lean man, with pince-nez and an interest in statistics. He was a territorial magnate to whom the Tomb estates appeared a cosy small-holding. He did not emphasize this in any boastful fashion, but in his statistical zeal gave Mrs. Kent-Cumberland some staggering figures. "Is Bessie your only child?" asked Mrs. Kent-Cumberland. "My only child and heir," he replied, coming down to brass tacks at once. "I dare say you have been wondering what sort of settlement I shall be able to make on her. Now that, I regret to say, is a question I cannot answer accurately. We have good years, Mrs. Kent-Cumberland, and we have bad years. It all depends." "But I dare say that even in bad years the income is quite considerable?"
"In a bad year," said Mr.
MacDougal,
the present, the net profits, after
"in a very
bad year such
— Mrs.
made for amount to
deductions have been
all
running expenses, insurance, taxation, and deterioration,
something between"
as
Kent-Cumberland
listened breathlessly
and fifty-two thousand pounds. I know that is a very vague statement, but it is impossible to be more accurate until the last returns are "fifty
in.
She admired everything. "It's so anshe would remark with relish, whether the object of her attention
Bessie was bland and creamy. tique,''
was the Norman Church of Tomb, the Victorian panelling in the billiard-room, or the central-heating system which Gervase had recently installed. Mrs. Kent-Cumberland took a great liking to the girl. "Thoroughly Teachable," she pronounced. "But I wonder whether she
is
really suited to
Tom
...
wonder ..."
I
•
The MacDougals
•
•
stayed for four days and,
Kent-Cumberland pressed them to return been enchanted with everything she saw. "I wish we could live here," she had
when
for a longer
said to
Tom
they
visit.
left,
Mrs.
Bessie had
on her
first
eve-
ning, "in this dear, quaint old house."
"Yes, darling, so do
always look on "Just as
it
we
as
I.
Of
course
it
all
belongs to Gervase, but
I
my home."
Australians look
on England."
"Exactly."
She had
insisted
on seeing everything; the old gabled manor, once
Waugh
Evelyn
the
home
of the family, relegated
now
145
dower house
to the function of
—
mansion was built in the eighteenth century the house of mean proportions and inconvenient offices where Mrs. KentCumberland, in her moments of depression, pictured her own declining years; the mill and the quarries; the farm, which to the MacDougals seemed minute and formal as a Noah's Ark. On these expeditions it was Gervase who acted as guide. "He, of course, knows so much more about it than Tom," Mrs. Kent-Cumberland explained. Tom, in fact, found himself very rarely alone with his fiancee. Once, when they were all together after dinner, the question of his marriage was mentioned. He asked Bessie whether, now that she had seen Tomb, she would sooner be married there, at the village church, than in London. "Oh, there is no need to decide anything hastily," Mrs. Kent-Cumberland had said. "Let Bessie look about a little first." since the present
•
When the MacDougals left,
•
•
was to go to Scotland to see the castle of their ancestors. Mr. MacDougal had traced relationship with various branches of his family, had corresponded with them intermittently, and
now wished
to
make
Bessie wrote to
it
their acquaintance.
them
all at
Tomb; she wrote
daily to
Tom, but
in
her thoughts, as she lay sleepless in the appalling bed provided for her
by her distant kinsmen, she was conscious for the
first
time of a light
and uncertainty. In Australia Tom had seemed so different from everyone else, so gentle and dignified and cultured. Here in England he seemed to recede into obscurity. Everyone in England seemed to be like Tom. feeling of disappointment
And then
there was the house.
It
was exactly the kind of house
which she had always imagined English people to live in, with the dear little park less than a thousand acres and the soft grass and the old stone. Tom had fitted into the house. He had fitted too well; had disappeared entirely in it and become part of the background. The central place belonged to Gervase so like Tom but more handsome; with all Tom's charm but with more personality. Beset with these thoughts, she rolled on the hard and irregular bed until dawn began to show through the lancet window of the Victorian-baronial turret. She loved that turret for all its discomfort. It was so antique.
—
—
—
12
Mrs. Kent-Cumberland was an active woman. after the
MacDougals'
visit
It
was
less
that she returned triumphantly
than ten days
from a day
in
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
146
London. After dinner, when she ing-room, she
sat
alone with
Tom
draw-
in the small
said:
"You'll be very
much
surprised to hear
who I saw
today. Gladys."
"Gladys?"
"Gladys Cruttwell."
"Good heavens. Where on "It
was quite by chance,"
earth did you meet her?"
mother vaguely. "She
said his
is
working
there now."
"How was "Very
she?"
pretty. Prettier,
There was
if
a pause. Mrs.
point chair seat.
anything."
Kent-Cumberland
"You know, dear boy,
stitched
away
at a gros-
that J never interfere, but
I
have
wondered whether you treated Gladys very kindly. I know I was partly to blame, myself. But you were both very young and your prospects so uncertain. I thought a year or two of separation would be a good test of whether you really loved one another." "Oh, I am sure she has forgo '^ten about me long ago." "Indeed, she has not, Tom. I thought she seemed a very unhappy often
girl."
"But
how can you know. Mother,
"We had luncheon
just seeing
her casually
like that?"
together," said Mrs. Kent-Cumberland. "In an
A.B.C. shop."
Another pause. "But, look here, I've forgotten
all
about her.
I
only care about
Bessie now."
"You know,
dearest boy,
never interfere.
I
I
think Bessie
is
a de-
But are you free? Are you free in your own conscience? You know, and I do not know, on what terms you parted from Gladys." And there returned, after a long absence, the scene which for the
lightful girl.
first
few months of
his Australian
venture had been constantly in Tom's
and many intemperate promises. He said nothing. "I did not tell Gladys of your engagement. I thought you had the right to do that as best you can, in your own way. But I did tell her you were back in England and that you wished to see her. She is coming here tomorrow for a night or two. She looked in need of a holiday, poor
memory, of
a tearful parting
—
child." •
When Tom
went
to
•
meet Gladys
•
at
the station they stood for
some
Then
their
minutes on the platform not certain of the other's
identity.
had been engaged the past two years, and was now walking out with a motor
tentative signs of recognition corresponded. Gladys
twice in
Evelyn
Waugh
147
had been a great surprise when Mrs. Kent-Cumberland sought her out and explained that Tom had returned to England. She had not forgotten him, for she was a loyal and good-hearted girl, but she was embarrassed and touched to learn that his devotion was unshaken. They were married two weeks later and Mrs. Kent-Cumberland undertook the delicate mission of "explaining everything" to the Macsalesman.
It
Dougals.
They went to Australia, where Mr. MacDougal very magnanimously gave them a post managing one of his more remote estates. He was satisfied with Tom's work. Gladys has a large sunny bungalow and a landscape of grazing-land and wire fences. She does not see very
company nor does she
much
what she does see. The neighbouring ranchers find her very English and aloof. Bessie and Gervase were married after six weeks' engagement. They live at Tomb. Bessie has two children and Gervase has six race-horses. Mrs. Kent-Cumberland lives in the house with them. She and Bessie rarely disagree, and, when they do, it is Mrs. Kent-Cumberland who gets particularly like
her way.
The dower house
on a long lease to a sporting manufacturer. Gervase has taken over the Hounds and spends money profusely; everyone in the neighbourhood is content. is
let
A.
J.
Liebling *
''NOTHING BUT A LITTLE PISSANT EXCERPT FROM
The Earl of Louisiana
[earl long addresses his constituents at ALEXANDRIA, LOUISIANA]
We
had left New Orleans at four, and Earl was slated to speak at eight. The owner of the old station wagon had said he could make it to Alick in four hours easy. It began to look not at all that easy. I tried to estimate the station wagon's speed by clocking it between signposts. From bunkie, 27 ml to bunkie, 20 ml, I caught it in a consoling seven minutes, but the next post, a good bit farther on, said bunkie, 23 ML Bunkie is the leading bourgade between Baton Rouge and Alick but there were other one-street-of-storeit has a population of 4,666 fronts towns that the road ran through. By now it was dusk and the stores were lighted, so that, coming out of the dark, we galloped episodically between plywood maple-finished bedroom suites in the windows on one side of the street and mannequins with $7.98 dresses on the other, scaring from our course gaunt hounds that looked like Kabyle dogs. The entrance to Alick was little more impressive than these others, except for two electric signs. One was a straw-hatted spook flapping great wings over the Hocus-Pocus Liquor Store and the other a symbolic giraffe and dachshund over a used-car lot. They disappeared at every other flash in favor of a legend: "High Quality, Low Prices." Hurrying through otherwise undistinguished streets, we passed between cars parked thick along the approaches to the courthouse square and heard the loudspeaker blaring long before we got there. Somebody was on the platform in front of the courthouse steps, standing too close to the microphone and blasting. The crowd, massed immediately around
—
the speaker's stand, thinned out toward the sidewalks.
My
companion
let
me
out and drove on to find a parking space,
A.
J.
my
Liebling
149
Imam
As I crossed over to the forum, a boy handed me a pink throwaway, which I examined when I got within range of the light diffused from the flood-
and
I
ran onto the lawn for
first
look at the
in the flesh.
lamps over the platform:
Governor Long Speaks Governor Long Opens Campaign
for
Re-Election
Come Out and Bring All your friends to hear the truth. Come out and see Governor Long in person. Nothing
will be said to offend or hurt anyone.
The Governor, on
the platform, was saying to
not see over in the other wing of the audience, "If
somebody I could you don't shut up
your claptrap, I'm going to have you forcibly removed. but a
common hoodlum and "Amen," an old man in
You
just
nothing
a heckler."
front of
me yelled.
"Give
it
to
him. Earl."
Whoever it was that Earl was talking to in the crowd had no microphone, so we couldn't hear him, but he must have answered in tones audible to the Governor, because the latter shouted into the mike, "I
knew your daddy, Camille Gravel, and he was a fine man. But you trying to make yourself a big man, and you nothing but a little pissant." "Amen, Earl," the old man yelled. "Give it to him." The fellow in the crowd, now identified for me as a lawyer from Alick who was the Democratic National Committeeman from Louisiana, must have spoken again, for the Governor thundered, "Mr. Gravel, I got nothing against you personally.
Now you keep quiet and
I
won't mention
you don't I'll have you removed as a common damn nuisance." He paused for the answer we couldn't hear and then bellowed, "If you so popular, why don't you run for Governor?" It sounded like a dialogue between a man with the horrors and his
your name.
If
But the National Committeeman, Earl's interlocutor, the flesh. He had brought his ten children, and they were
hallucinations.
was there all
in
mad at the Governor. The night was like a heavy
blanket pressed
down on
the lawn.
Men
stood in their sleeveless, collarless shirts, and sweat caked the talcum
powder on the backs of the women's necks. Anti-Long newspapers the next day conceded the crowd was between three and four thousand so there may well have been more. Plenty of Negroes, always in little groups, were scattered
among
the whites
— an
example,
I
suppose, of
Harry Golden's "vertical integration," because in public gatherings where there are seats, the two colors are always separated into blocs.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
150
"That's the
"Not
way
I
like to see it,"
the Governor said, from the stand.
our colored friends in one spot and white friends in another. I'm
all
the best friend the poor white man, and the middle-class white man, and the rich white
man
man, ever had little
— so long
as
he behave himself
in the State of Loosiana.
pea-headed nut Willie Rainach
And
if
— and the poor colored
the N.A.A.C.P. and that
will just leave
us alone, then sensible
people, not cranks, can get along in a reasonable way. That Rainach
wants to
fight the Civil
War
all
over again."
There were two colored couples, middle-aged, in front of me, next to the old white man who didn't like Gravel, and now one of the colored men shouted, "Amen!" The old white man gave him a reproving look, but he couldn't bawl him out for agreeing with a Long. Nobody can object to reczsonable and sensible, but Long hadn't said what he thought reasonable and sensible were, and it occurred to me that he probably never would.
had been looking at him with an amateur clinical eye since I got there, and his physical condition seemed to me to have improved several hundred per cent since his stump appearance with Joe Sims on the Fourth of July. Late hours and a diet of salted watermelon, buttermilk, and Vienna sausages cut up in chicken broth had put a dozen pounds back on his bones. Walking between grandstands and paddocks had legged him up, and he pranced under the floodlights that must have raised the temperature to no or so. I remembered when I had seen first the referee, Ruby Goldstein, and then the great Sugar Ray Robinson himself collapse under the heat of similar lights in a ring on a less opI
pressive night in
New York.
Uncle Earl wore a jacket, shirt and tie, a pattern of statesmanlike conventionality, on a night when everybody off the platform was coatless and tieless. The tie itself was a quiet pattern of inkblots against an oliveand-pearl background, perhaps a souvenir Rorschach test from Galveston. The suit, a black job that dated from the days when he was fat and sassy, hung loosely about him as once it had upon a peg in the supermarket where the Governor liked to buy his clothes. He left the dude role to Morrison. And in fact, before the evening was over, he said, "I see Dellasoups has been elected one of the ten bestdressed men in America. He has fifty-dollar neckties and four-hundreddollar suits. A four-hundred-dollar suit on old Uncle Earl would look like socks
on It
listing
a rooster."
is
difficult to report a
speech by Uncle Earl chronologically,
the thoughts in order of appearance.
and off the stage
like
They chased one another on
characters in a Shakespearean battle scene,
full
of
A.
alarums and
popped
J.
Liebling
151
But Morrison, good roads, and old-age pensions
sorties.
in quite often.
and now a declared rival for the Governorship, he said, "1 hear Big Bad Bill Dodd has been talking about the inefficiency and waste in this administration. Ohyeah.
Of Dodd,
the state auditor, a
quondam
ally
Ohyeah. Well, let me tell you, Big Bad Bill has at least six streamlined deadheads on his payroll that couldn't even find Bill's office if they had to. But they can find that post office every month to get their salary check Ohyeah." It was after the "reasonable and sensible" bit that he went into his general declaration of tolerance. "I'm not against anybody for reasons of race, creed, or any ism he might believe in except nuttism, skingameism
— or
communism," he
said.
"I'm glad to see so
been so kind Catholic and
to
me
sixty
I
many
of
my
sometimes say
fine Catholic friends here I
— they
consider myself forty per cent
per cent Baptist." (This
is
a fairly accurate reflection
of the composition of the electorate.) "But I'm in favor of every religion
with the possible exception of snake-chunking. Anybody that so pre-
sumes on how he stands with providence that he will let a snake bite him, I say he deserves what he's got coming to him." The snake-chunkers, a small, fanatic cult, do not believe in voting.
"Amen,
Earl," the old
man
said.
changed with the poetry of his thought, now benign, now mischievous, now indignant. Only the moist hazel eyes remained the same, fixed on a spot above and to the rear of the audience as if expecting momentarily the arrival of a posse. "I don't need this job," he said. "I don't need money." He stopped and winked. "I don't miss it except when I run out." There were shouts of laughter, the effect he courted.
The
expressions
"Amen,
Earl.
on the Governor's
You
tell
face
'em. Earl."
His face turned serious, as
if
he had not expected to be so cruelly
misunderstood. "I'm serious about that," he said.
"You know I'm no goody-goody.
But if I have ever misappropriated one cent, by abuse of my office, and anyone can prove it, I'll resign. "I know lots of ways to make a living. I know how to be a lawyer, and a danged good one. I know how to be a traveling salesman. I know
how to pick cotton, and have many times, although I've seen the days when to get my hundred pounds I had to put a watermelon in the bag." There were gales of tolerant laughter now, even from farmers who would shoot any of their own help they found cheating on weight.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
152
he said, with the honesty throbbing in his voice like a musical saw, "is a chance once again to help the fine people of the Great State of Loosiana, and to continue to serve them as their Governor." Even a group of great louts in T-shirts, perhaps high-school football players, were silent and by now impressed; earlier in the address they had made a few feeble attempts at heckling, like yelling, "Hey, Earl, what's in the glass?" when the Governor paused for a drink of water. These boys might be from well-to-do anti-Long families, but they had the endemic Southern (and Arabic) taste for oratory, and they knew a master when "All
I
ask,"
they heard him.
Mr. Gravel, down near the platform, must have again attracted the Governor's attention, but
was
in a
benign
now Uncle
mood from
Earl, the creature of his
offering his
own body
to the
own
voice,
Great State of
Loosiana.
"Mr. Gravel," he
you would lend
five
of
said,
"you got ten beautiful children there,
them
to
me to
publicized sorrows that he, like the
bring up."
Shah of
It
I
wish
was one of Earl's
well-
Iran then, had
no
legitimate
and he handed peppermint candies or small change to all children he saw, even in years when there was no election. "He bought those candies by grosses of dozens," an ex-associate told me. Mr. Gravel, still inaudible except to Earl, must have declined this overture, because the Governor shouted to the crowd, "He used to be a nice fellow, but now he just a goddamn hoodlum!" "Leave him alone, Earl, we come to hear you talk!" the old man heir,
near
me
shouted back.
Minneannapolis once, talking to the Governor of Minnesota, a great expert on insanity," Uncle Earl said, "and he told me an astonishing fact there are ten times as many crazy people in Minnesota "I
was
in
—
as Louisiana.
I
suppose that
is
on account of the cold
cannot go around in their shirt-sleeves fishin' in all seasons, as
we
do.
all
climate.
They
year around, go huntin' and
We got a wonderful climate," he said,
paused to wipe the sweat from
his face with a
and
handkerchief soaked in
Coca-Cola, which he poured from a bottle out of a bucket of ice handed
him by one of the
lesser candidates
on
his ticket.
The bugs
the edge of the lighted area and converging on the floodlights
beaded curtain. "On account we got so few crazy people, we can afford mille Gravel run around."
haze
up at formed a
soaring
as thick as a
to let
Ca-
"Leave him up. Earl," the old man yelled. "You got him licked." "Some sapsuckers talk about cutting down taxes," the Governor said,
apropos of nothing he had been talking about. "Where are they
A.
going to
start cutting
J.
Liebling
On
expenses?
153
(When any opaccuses him of want-
the spastic school?"
ponent suggests a cut in welfare expenditures, Earl ing to take it out on the spastics. This is the equivalent of charging the fellow would sell his mother for glue.) "They want to cut down on the spastics?
On the little children,
enjoying the school lunches?
Or on
those
— and he bowed — second "who enjoy the most generous
fine old people, white-haired against the sunset of life" his
own
white head for a
United States?
state pensions in the
"We try
split
got the finest roads, finest schools, finest hospitals in the coun-
— yet there are
rich
men who
complain. They are so tight you can
when they walk. They wouldn't give a nickel to see a earthquake. They sit there swallowin' hundred-dollar bills like a bullfrog swallows minners if you chunked them as many as they want, they'd hear 'em squeak
—
bust."
"Amen,
man
Earl," the old
said.
"God have mercy on the poor
people.
"Of course,
know many
Governor said, perhaps thinking of his campaign contributors. "But the most of them are like a rich old feller I knew down in Plaquemine Parish, who died one night and never done nobody no good in his life, and yet, when the Devil come to get him, he took an appeal to St. Peter. " 'I done some good things on earth,' he said. 'Once, on a cold day in
about 1913,
I
I
gave a blind
fine rich people," the
man
a nickel.' St. Peter looked
all
through
on page four hundred and seventy-one, he found the entry. That ain't enough to make up for a misspent life,' he said. 'But wait,' the rich man says. 'Now I remember, in 1922 I gave five cents to a poor widow woman that had no carfare.' St. Peter's clerk checked the book again, and on page thirteen hundred and seventy-one, after pages and pages of how this old stump-wormer loan-sharked the poor, the records, and at
last,
he found the record of that " 'That ain't neither
yelled, 'Don't
Cross.'
The
sentence
clerk
nickel.
enough,'
me
yet.
St.
Peter said. But the
In about 1931
found that entry,
too.
I
So he
mean
old thing
give a nickel to the
Red
said to St. Peter, 'Your
"
Honor, what are we going to do with him?' The crowd hung on Uncle Earl's lips the way the bugs hovered in the
light.
"You know what courthouse square
no
St.
Peter said?" the Governor, the only one in the
who knew
the answer, asked. There was, naturally,
reply.
"He "
Hell.'
said, 'Give
him back
his fifteen cents
and
tell
him
to
go to
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
154
He had
him now, and he dropped it. "Folks," he said, "I know you didn't come here just to hear me talk. If this big mouth of mine ever shut up, I'd be in a devil of a fix. I want to introduce to you some of the fine sincere candidates that are running with me on my ticket. My ticket and the independent candidates I have endorsed are trained, skilled, and have the wisdom and experience to make you honest, loyal and sincere public servants." He turned to the triple row of men and women who sat behind him on undertaker's chairs, the men swabbing, the women dabbing, at their faces with handkerchiefs, while the Governor talked like an intrepid trainer who turns his back on his troupe of performing animals. A reporter who had his watch on the Governor said that his talk had
the crowd with
he said, "I serve under me as
and he was not even blowing. want to introduce to you the man I have Lieutenant Governor during my next term
Frenchmun,
a fine Catholic, the father of twenty-three
lasted fifty-seven minutes,
"And selected to
of office
—
first,"
a fine
children, Mr. Oscar Guidry."
The number of children was that Mr.
Guidry was
politically significant, since
a practicing, not a soi-disant, Catholic.
date for Lieutenant Governor had to be a
Frenchman and
it
indicated
The
candi-
a Catholic,
because Uncle Earl was neither.
Mr. Guidry, a short, stocky man who reminded me of a muscular owl, arose from his chair like a Mr. Bones called to front center by Mr. Interlocutor. He appeared embarrassed, and he whispered rapidly to
Uncle Earl. "Oscar says he has only fourteen children," the Governor announced. "But that's a good beginnin'." Mr. Guidry whispered again, agitated, and Earl said, "But he is a member of a family of twenty-three brothers and sisters." He turned away, as if washing his hands of the whole affair, and sat down. Mr. Guidry, throwing back his head and clasping his hands in front of him, as if about to intone the "Marseillaise," began with a rush, sounding
all
his aitches: "I
am
honored to be associated with the Gret
on his tiquette. Those who have conspired against him, fearing to shoot him with a pistol ball ..." and he was off, but Earl, seated directly behind him, was mugging and catching flies, monopolizing attention like an old vaudeville star cast in a play with a
Governeur of the Gret
gang of Method
Stet
actors.
Pulling his chair slightly out of line, he crossed his legs and turned his profile to the audience, first plucking at his sleeves,
about
as far as his
thumbnails, then,
which came down
when he had disengaged
his
hands.
A.
J.
Liebling
155
picking his nose while he looked over at Alick's leading hotel, the Bent-
the street, described by the Louisiana State Guide as "a
ley, across
story building of brick
decorated interior."
and stone, with a columned fagade and
He
stared at
as
it
if it
six-
a richly
contained some absorbing
riddle.
When
he had finished with his nose, he began to bathe his face, his temples and the back of his neck with Coca-Cola from the cold bottle, sloshing it on like iced cologne. "Cool yourself off. Earl," a voice piped up from the crowd, and the
Governor shouted back, "I'm a red-hot poppa." When he had wet himself down sufficiently, he drank the heeltap and set the bottle down. Then he lit a cigarette and smoked, dramatically, with the butt held between his thumb and middle finger and the other fingers raised, in the manner of a ventriloquist. While he smoked right-handed, he pulled out his handkerchief and blotted his wet face with his
left.
He
unheeding of the rumpus raised by his adherents, like a player in a jazz band who has finished his solo, or a flashy halfback who poses on the bench while the defensive team is in. The candidates ranted and bellowed, putting across a few telling although familiar points. "In the great state of Texas, biggest and richest in the United States, there is an old-age pension of thirty-one dollars a month. Here in Loosiana
we
sat
got seventy-two."
But the bored crowd stood fast, knowing that a whistle would blow and the star would throw off his blanket and come onto the field again to run rings around the forces of Mammon. Sure enough, after what seemed to me an endless session of subordinate rant, the Governor threw away the last of a chain of cigarettes and shook his head like a man waking up on a park bench and remembering where he is. He got up and walked to the microphone so fast that the man using it had barely time to say, "I thank you" before the Governor took it away from him. "You shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free," the
Governor
said,
Alexandria
"but you
Town
Do
Talk.
will
You
never get to know the truth by reading the all
read in that paper that
I
am
crazy.
been accused of saying the fella that owns that paper is a kept man. Maybe he ain't, but I'd like to be kep' as good as he is. He married a rich woman. That's about the
Ohyeah.
I
look any crazier than
I
ever did?
I
way I know to save yourself about ninety-eight years' hard work." "Amen, Earl, it's the truth," the old man in front of me cried, and the Negroes laughed at what was apparently a well-established local joke. "Maybe some of you are here because you've never seen a man out
best
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
156
"Maybe you want times with needles. Oh, the
of a nuthouse before," the Governor said tolerantly.
man who has been stuck thirty-eight first man stuck me, stuck me right through the britches. He didn't get me in the fat part, either, and oh, how it hurt! Maybe I lost a little weight, to see a
but you would have, too. Occasionally
happened
you
to
damn, but if it had Christ on the Cross
say hell or
I
you'd say worse than that.
all,
Himself never suffered worse than poor old Earl!
"Oh, not that I'm fit to walk in Christ's shoes!" he bellowed to preclude any confusion. "I'm not good enough, when a fellow slugs me on one cheek, to turn the other side of my scheming head. I'm going to slug
him back." "Amen, Earl. You
"Down judge,
I
tell
him. Earl.
Who you
goin' to hit
Earl?"
first.
there in that court in Texas in Galveston before that Texas
felt like
Christ between the two thieves.
He
reared back his head "
and he said, 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do!' At this point he was interrupted by wild handclapping from a group of elderly ladies wearing print dresses, white gloves, straw hats and spaceman eyeglasses, who had been seated quietly on the platform through the earlier proceedings. They were under the impression that it was an original line. I
next
remember the Governor
hausted, having given his after
running the
like old blind
Pete
is
first
Pete
all
in his seat again,
to the electorate, in a pose like Bannister
four-minute mile.
Herman
head down, ex-
fighting
occurred to
It
on heart alone, by
me
that
he was
a trained reflex.
a friend of the Governor's.
one of the assisting speakers, a fellow with a strong voice, grabbed the microphone and declaimed the family battle As Earl
sat there,
ode, "Invictus."
When
the
man came
to the part
Under
Ma up
Earl flung
his
head
where
it
says:
the bludgeonings of fate
haid
is
bloody, but
unbowed
horse and got up
like a wild
go into a dance to prove he hasn't been hurt.
hands by everybody who was going to vote
for
like a fighter
about to
called for a
show of
He
him, and
I
waved both of
mine. I
left
him surrounded by
children to
coins, "a quarter to the white kids
My
whom
and a nickel
companion had rejoined me
he was passing out
to the niggers."
after parking the car,
walked together through the breaking crowd.
and we
A.
"How
Liebling
could his wife have done him
asking another, and a
coming
J.
man was
saying,
157 like
"Got
she done?" a
woman was
to give da ol'
dawg what's
to him."
My
saw Gravel, a handsome, tanned man in a white sports shirt and black slacks, standing where the lawn ended at the pavement, and walked over to him. Two or three reporters were already there, friend
when Earl said what. The National Committeeman said he had come to hear the speech because two or three men close to Earl had called him up and warned him that Earl was going to blacken his name. asking Gravel what he had said
"I
wanted
to
be there to
nail the lie,"
he
said.
He
said Earl started
the argument. Six or eight of the ten Gravel children played hide-and-seek around their father's legs,
and
as
he
talked,
another boy, about eleven years old,
ran up and said to a slightly younger
wanted
to give
"Why
me
a quarter, but
not?" the
girl
I
girl,
his sister,
wouldn't take
asked, and
I
"The Governor
it."
decided she had a bigger political
future than her brother.
Gravel said he had to go tion there,
and the
rest of us
home because
there was a wedding recep-
walked back toward the Bentley, where
all
The row
of
the rocking chairs on the porch were already occupied.
glowing cigar ends swaying in unison reminded a
glowworm number.
me
of the Tiller Girls in
S.
J.
Perelman
FAREWELL, MY LOVELY APPETIZER
Add
Smorgasbits to your ought-to-know department, the newest of the three Betty Lee products. What in the world! ]ust small mouth-
size pieces
of herring and of pinkish tones.
promised not to
tell
We
the secret of their tinting.
dleford's food column
in the
and Clementine Pad-
crossed our heart
—
Herald Tribune.
The "Hush-Hush" blouse. We're very hush-hush about his name, but the celebrated shirtmaker who did it for us is famous on two continents
for blouses
with details
the wonderful shoulder pads,
like those
deep yoke
folds,
the shirtband bowl — Russeks adv.
in
the Times.
came down the sixth-floor corridor of the Arbogast Building, past the World Wide Noodle Corporation, Zwinger & Rumsey, Accountants, and the Ace Secretarial Service, Mimeographing Our Specialty. The legend on the ground-glass panel next door said, "Atlas Detective Agency, Noonan & Driscoll," but Snapper Driscoll had retired two years before I
with a .38 slug between the shoulders, donated by a snowbird in Tacoma,
and I owned what good will the firm had. I let myself into the crummy anteroom we kept to impress clients, growled good morning at Birdie Claflin.
"Well, you certainly look like something the cat dragged in," she said.
taffy
She had a quick tongue. She also had eyes like dusty lapis lazuh, hair, and a figure that did things to me. I kicked open the bottom
drawer of her desk, Birdie square
on her
let
two inches of rye
lush, red
mouth, and
trickle
down my
craw, kissed
set fire to a cigarette.
S.
"I
J.
Perelman
could go for you, sugar,"
159
said slowly.
I
Her
face was veiled,
way they were joined to her head. There was something complete about them; you knew they were there for keeps. When you're a private eye, you want things to stay put. "Any customers?" "A woman by the name of Sigrid Bjornsterne said she'd be back. A
watchful.
I
stared at her ears, liking the
looker."
"Swede?" "She'd
like
you
to think so."
nodded toward the inner office to indicate that I was going in there, and went in there. I lay down on the davenport, took off my shoes, and bought myself a shot from the bottle I kept underneath. Four minutes later, an ash-blonde with eyes the color of unset opals, in a Nettie Rosenstein basic black dress and a baum-marten stole, burst in. Her bosom was heaving and it looked even better that way. With a gasp she circled the desk, hunting for some place to hide, and then, spotting the wardrobe where I keep a change of bourbon, ran into it. I got up and wandered out into the anteroom. Birdie was deep in a crossword puzzle. "See anyone come in here?" "Nope." There was a thoughtful line between her brows. "Say, what's a five-letter word meaning 'trouble'?" "Swede," I told her, and went back inside. I waited the length of time it would take a small, not very bright, boy to recite Ozymandias, I
and, inching carefully along the wall, took a quick gander out the win-
dow.
A
thin galoot with stooping shoulders was being very busy reading
a paper outside the Gristede store
two blocks away.
an hour ago, but then, of course, neither had
I.
He hadn't been there He wore a size seven
dove-colored hat from Browning King, a tan Wilson Brothers shirt with pale-blue stripes, a
J.
Press foulard with a mixed red-and-white figure,
dark-blue Interwoven socks, and an unshined pair of oxblood
Character shoes.
made
I
let
a cigarette burn
down between my
London
fingers until
it
opened the wardrobe. "Hi," the blonde said lazily. "You Mike Noonan?" I made a noise that could have been "Yes," and waited. She yawned. I thought things over, decided to play it safe. I yawned. She yawned back, then, settling into a corner of the wardrobe, went to sleep. I let another cigarette burn down until it made a second red mark beside the first one and then I woke her up. She sank into a chair, crossing a pair of gams that tightened my throat as I peered under the desk at them. "Mr. Noonan," she said, "you you've got to help me." a small red mark,
and then
I
—
"My
few friends
call
me
Mike,"
I
said pleasantly.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l6o
"Mike." She rolled the syllable on her tongue.
"I don't believe I've
name before. Irish?" "Enough to know the difference between
a gossoon
and
"What
dummied
up;
ever heard that
is
the difference?" she asked.
I
wasn't giving anything away for free. Her eyes narrowed.
two hundred pounds
slightly, lazily set fire to a finger,
a bassoon."
I
I
figured
I
my
shifted
and watched
it
burn down. I could see she was admiring the interplay of muscles in my shoulders. There wasn't any extra fat on Mike Noonan, but I wasn't telling her that. I was playing it safe until I knew where we stood. When she spoke again, it came with a rush. "Mr. Noonan, he thinks I'm trying to poison him. But I swear the herring was pink I took
—
it
out of the
offered
jar myself.
If
could only find out
I
them money, but they wouldn't
"Suppose you take
how
they tinted
to
I
my
shook
it
head.
"It's
a
Vitellius. It
spintria of
tremendously valuable coin believed
have been given by the Emperor Hadrian to one of
Caius
I
tell."
from the beginning," I suggested. She drew a deep breath. "You've heard of the golden
Hadrian?"
it.
his proconsuls,
disappeared about 150 A.D., and eventually passed into
the possession of Hucbald the Fat. After the sack of Adrianople by the
Turks,
hakim,
man named Shapiro to the court physician, or of Abdul Mahmoud. Then it dropped out of sight for nearly five
it
hundred
was loaned by
a
when
years, until last August,
a dealer in
named Lloyd Thursday sold it to my husband. "And now it's gone again," I finished. "No," she
said.
"At
least,
it
secondhand books
"
was lying on the dresser when
I
left,
an
hour ago." I leaned back, pretending to fumble a carbon out of the desk, and studied her legs again. This was going to be a lot more intricate than I had thought. Her voice got huskier. "Last night I brought home a jar of Smorgasbits for Walter's dinner. You know them?" "Small mouth-size pieces of herring and of pinkish tones, aren't they?"
Her eyes darkened, know?" "I
lightened, got darker again.
haven't been a private op nine years for nothing,
—
"How sister.
did you
Go on."
away something was wrong when Walter screamed and upset his plate. I tried to tell him the herring was supposed to be pink, but he carried on like a madman. He's been suspicious of me since "I
—
I
knew
right
made him take out that hfe insurance." "What was the face amount of the policy?"
well, ever since
I
"A hundred thousand. But case he died by sea food. Mr.
it
carried a triple-indemnity clause in
Noonan
— Mike —
"
her tone caressed
me
S.
—
win back
"I've got to
Perelman
J.
161
You could
his confidence.
find out
how
they
tinted that herring."
"What's in
for
it
me?"
"Anything you want. The words were a whisper. poked open her handbag, counted off five grand. "
my
me
hold
"This'll
I
said. "If
this
golden spintria of yours
trailed past
me
caught her
go
"I
in a
learn
beat
it,
how
think of
threw
it
at
in for
glamour." She
ninety rugs the ounce.
her up to me.
named
"Where 'd you
"I just
cloud of scent that retailed
wrist, pulled
for girls
I
I'll
with the herring?"
tie in
she said calmly.
"It doesn't,"
leaned over,
need any more,
I
spoon on the high chair." She got up. "Oh, while
does
I
for a while,"
I
Sigrid with opal eyes,"
I
said.
my name?"
haven't been a private snoop twelve years for nothing, sister."
"I
"It
was nine
last
time."
seemed like twelve till you came along." I held the clinch until a faint wisp of smoke curled out of her ears, pushed her through the door. Then I slipped a pint of rye into my stomach and a heater into my kick and went looking for a bookdealer named Lloyd Thursday. I knew he had no connection with the herring caper, but in my business you "It
don't overlook anything.
The
powder when I got rules. I hired a hack to
thin galoot outside Gristede's had taken a
there; that
meant we were no longer playing
Wanamaker's, cut over
to Third,
Twelfth a mink-faced jasper
girls'
walked up toward Fourteenth. At
made up
as a street cleaner tailed
block, drifted into a dairy restaurant. At Thirteenth
for a
somebody dropped
me
tomato out of a third-story window, missing
a sour
me
by inches.
I
doubled back to Wanamaker's, hopped a bus up Fifth to Madison Square, and switched to a cab
bookshops elbow each other
A flabby hombre in
down Fourth, where
the secondhand
like dirty urchins.
a Joe
Carbondale rope-knit sweater, whose jowl
could have used a shave, quit giggling over The Heptameron long enough to
tell
when
me I
he was Lloyd Thursday. His shoebutton eyes became opaque asked to see any first editions or incunabula relative to the Clupea
harengus, or
"You than Pee
common
got the
Wee
"Maybe
herring.
wrong
pitch, copper,"
a sawbuck'll smarten
sterne's
you up,"
my
I
said.
chin with
it.
I
is
hotter
folded one to the
"There's five yards
anyone who knows why those Smorgasbits of happened to be pink." His eyes got crafty. for
stuff
Russell's clarinet."
size of a postage stamp, scratched
around
he snarled. "That
Sigrid Bjorn-
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
l62 "I
might
talk for a
grand."
He motioned toward the back. I took a step forA second later a Roman candle exploded inside my head and I
"Start dealing."
ward.
went away from there. When I came to, I was on the floor with a lump on my sconce the size of a lapwing's egg and big Terry Tremaine of Homicide was bending over me. "Someone sapped me," I said thickly. "His name was "Webster," grunted Terry. He held up a dog-eared copy of Merriam's Unabridged. "You tripped on a loose board and this fell off a shelf on your think tank." "Yeah?" I said skeptically. "Then where's Thursday?" He pointed
—
man
"He passed out cold when he saw you cave." I covered up, let Terry figure it any way he wanted. I wasn't telling him what cards I held. I was playing it safe until I knew all to the fat
lying across a pile of erotica.
the angles. In a seedy
pharmacy
off Astor Place, a stale
might have been Vulgarian but wasn't dressed
my
Armenian whose name
my
head and
started ask-
and he lost interest. Jerking my head toward the coffee urn, I spent a nickel and the next forty minutes doing some heavy thinking. Then I holed up in a phone booth and dialed a clerk I knew called Little Farvel in a delicatessen store on Amsterdam Avenue. It took a while to get the dope I wanted because the connection was bad and Little Farvel had been dead two years, but we Noonans ing questions.
don't
let
go
I
put
knee
in his groin
easily.
By the time I worked back to the Arbogast Building, via the Weehawken ferry and the George Washington Bridge to cover my tracks, all the pieces were in place. Or so I thought up to the point she came out of the wardrobe holding me between the sights of her ice-blue automatic. "Reach for the stratosphere, gumshoe." Sigrid Bjornsterne's voice was colder than Horace Greeley and Little Farvel put together, but her clothes were plenty calorific. She wore a forest-green suit of Hockanum woolens, a Knox Wayfarer, and baby crocodile pumps. It was her blouse, though, that made tiny red hairs stand up on my knuckles. Its deep yoke folds, shoulder pads, and shirtband bow could only have been designed by some master craftsman, some Cezanne of the shears. "Well, Nosy Parker," she sneered, "so you found out how they tinted the herring."
"Sure
— grenadine,"
I
said easily.
"You knew
it all
along.
And you
planned to add a few grains of oxylbutane-cheriphosphate, which turns
same shade of pink in solution, to your husband's wouldn't show in the post-mortem. Then you'd
knowing
the
portion,
it
collect the three
S.
J.
Perelman
163
hundred G's and join Harry Pestalozzi in Nogales till the heat died down. But you didn't count on me." "You?" Mockery nicked her full-throated laugh. "What are you going to do about it?" "This." I snaked the rug out from under her and she went down in a swirl of silken ankles. The bullet whined by me into the ceiling as I vaulted over the desk, pinioned her against the wardrobe.
"Mike." Suddenly
all
the hatred had drained away and her body
yielded to mine. "Don't turn
no good, "Try me."
in.
"O.K. The shirtmaker
who
— once."
me double-time me
You
You'd only
Sigrid.
"It's
me
cared for
again."
designed your blouse
—what's
his
name?" A shudder of fear went over her; she averted her head. "He's famous on two continents. Come on Sigrid, they're your dice." "I won't tell you. I can't. It's a secret between this this department store and me." "They wouldn't be loyal to you. They'd sell you out fast enough." "Oh, Mike, you mustn't. You don't know what you're asking."
—
"For the
last
time."
"Oh, sweetheart, don't you see?" Her eyes were tragic pools, a cenotaph to lost illusions. "I've got so little. Don't take that away from me. I I'd never be able to hold up my head in Russeks again." ." There was silence "Well, if that's the way you want to play it in the room, broken only by Sigrid's choked sob. Then, with a strangely empty feeling, I uncradled the phone and dialed Spring 7-3100. For an hour after they took her away, I sat alone in the taupecolored dusk, watching lights come on and a woman in the hotel opposite
—
.
adjusting a garter.
jammed on my
Then
treated
I
my
.
tonsils to five fingers of firewater,
and made for the anteroom. Birdie was still scowling over her crossword puzzle. She looked up crookedly at me. "Need me any more tonight?" "No." I dropped a grand or two in her lap. "Here, buy yourself
some
hat,
Stardust."
"Thanks,
I've got
my
quota." For the
of pain behind her eyes. "Mike, would
"As long as
it
isn't
clean,"
I
first
time
— would you
flipped to conceal
I
tell
caught a shadow
me
my bitterness.
"What's an eight-letter word meaning 'sentimental'?" "Flatfoot, darling,"
I
said,
something?"
and went out into the
rain.
Leo Rosten MR. K*A*P*L*A*N,
THE COMPARATIVE, AND THE SUPERLATIVE EXCERPT FROM The Education ofHyman Kaplan
For two weeks Mr. Parkhill had been delaying the inescapable: Mr. Kaplan,
like
the other students in the beginners' grade of the American
Night Preparatory School for Adults, would have to present a composition for class analysis. All the students
had had
their turn writing the
assignment on the board, a composition of one hundred words, entitled
"My
Job."
Now
only Mr. Kaplan's rendition remained.
would be more accurate to say Mr. K*a*p*l*a*n's rendition of the assignment remained, for even in thinking of that distinguished student, Mr. Parkhill saw the image of his unmistakable signature, in all its red-blue-green glory. The multicolored characters were more than a trademark; they were an assertion of individuality, a symbol of singularity, a proud expression of Mr. Kaplan's Inner Self. To Mr. Parkhill, the signature took on added meaning because it was associated with the man who had said his youthful ambition had been to become "a physician and sergeant," the Titan who had declined the verb "to fail": "fail, failed, It
bankropt."
One
night, after the
two weeks' procrastination, Mr. Parkhill de-
cided to face the worst. "Mr. Kaplan,
your composition on the board.
I
think
it's
your turn to
— —write er
"
buoyant smile grew more great and more buoyant. "My!" he exclaimed. He rose, looked around at the class proudly as if surveying the blessed who were to witness a linguistic tour de force, stumbled over Mrs. Moskowitz's feet with a polite "Vould you be so Mr. Kaplan's
great,
Leo Rosten
165
There he rejected several Mr. Parkhill it was a nod of distinct
kindly?" and took his place at the blackboard.
pieces of chalk critically,
reassurance
nodded
— and then printed My
Job
to
—
in firm letters:
A Cotter
In Dress Faktory
Comp. by
"You need not Parkhill quickly. "Er
write your
—
name on
to save time
the board," interrupted Mr.
..."
Mr. Kaplan's face expressed astonishment. "Podden me, Mr. Pockheel.
But de name is by me pot of mine composition." "Your name is part of the composition?" asked Mr. Parkhill
in
an
anxious tone. "Yassir/" said
Mr. Kaplan with
H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
for
all
dignity.
He
printed the rest of
and admire. You could tell it have colored chalk for this perfor-
to see
was a disappointment for him not to mance. In pale white the elegance of his work was dissipated. The name, indeed, seemed unreal, the letters stark, anemic, almost denuded. His brow wrinkled and perspiring, Mr. Kaplan wrote the saga of A Cotter In Dress Faktory on the board, with
much
scratching of the chalk
and an undertone of sound. Mr. Kaplan repeated each word to himself softly, as if trying to give to its spelling some of the flavor and originality of his pronunciation. The smile on the face of Mr. Kaplan had taken on something beatific and imperishable: it was his first experience at the blackboard; it was his moment of glory. He seemed to be writing more slowly than necessary as if to prolong the ecstasy of his Hour. When he had finished he said "Hau Kay" with distinct regret in his voice, and sat down. Mr. Parkhill observed the composition in all its strange beauty:
My Job A Cotter In Dress
Faktory
Comp. by H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N Shakspere
is
saying what
fulls
man
is
and
I
am
feeling just the
same
way when I am thinking about mine job a cotter in Dress Faktory on 38 St. by 7 av. For why should we slafing in dark place by laktric lights and all kinds hot for $30 or maybe $36 with overtime, for Boss who is fat and driving in fency automobil? I ask! Because we are the deprassed workers of world. And are being exployted. By Bosses. In mine shop is no difference. Oh how bad is laktric light, oh how is
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l66
And when
kinds hot.
all
am
I
telling
Foreman should be
better
conditions he hollers, Kaplan you redical!!
At
this point a glazed look
came
into
Mr.
Parkhill's eyes,
but he
read on.
and work by bad light and always hot. But somday will the workers making Bosses to work! And then Kaplan will give to them bad laktric and positively no windows for the air should come in! So they can know what it means to slafe! Kaplan will make Foreman a cotter like he is. And give the most bad dezigns to cot
So
I
keep
still
out. Justice.
Mine
job
is
cotting Dress dezigns.
T-H-E E-N-D
Mr. Parkhill read the amazing document over again. His eyes, glazed but a moment before, were haunted now. It was true: spelling, diction, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, the use of the
present perfect for the present "Is planty mistakes,
"Y-yes
.
.
.
I
—
all
true.
s'pose," suggested
yes, there are
many
Mr. Kaplan modestly.
mistakes."
"Dat's because I'm tryink to give dip ideas " said Mr. Kaplan with
the sigh of those
who
storm heaven.
— —
Mr. Parkhill girded his mental loins. "Mr. Kaplan er your composition doesn't really meet the assignment. You haven't described your job, what you do, what your work is." "Veil,
it's
not soch a interastink job," said Mr. Kaplan.
—
"Your composition is not a simple exposition. It's more of a well, an essay on your attitude." "Oh, fine!" cried Mr. Kaplan with enthusiasm. "No, no," said Mr. Parkhill hastily. "The assignment was meant to be a composition. You see, we must begin with simple exercises before
we
try
— — more philosophical er
essays."
Mr. Kaplan nodded with resignation. "So naxt time should be no ideas, like abot
"Y-yes.
Shaksbeer? Should be only fects?"
No
You could
ideas, only
— — er
facts."
see by Mr. Kaplan's martyred smile that his wings, like
those of an eagle's, were being clipped.
"And Mr. Kaplan
— — why do you
Why
er
use 'Kaplan' in the body of
7 will make the foreman a cutter' " instead of 'Kaplan will make the foreman a cutter?' Mr. Kaplan's response was instantaneous. "I'm so glad you eskink
your composition?
don't you say
Leo Rosten
me
dis!
Ha! I'm usink 'Keplen'
rizzon: becawss
against de foreman, so
I
said
de composition
for plain
de reader should tink
didn't vant
I
make de foreman
in
167
more
it
like
I
and tsimple
am
prajiidiced
abot a strenger: 'Keplen
vill
"
a cotter!'
In the face of this subtle passion for objectivity, Mr. Parkhill was silent.
He
called for corrections.
A forest of hands went up.
pointed out errors in spelling, the use of capital
Norman Bloom "Woikers
said,
corrected several is
letters,
Miss Mitnick
punctuation; Mr.
more words, rearranged sentences, and
exployted with an
'i,'
not
'y'
as
Kaplan makes"; Miss
Caravello changed "fulls" to "fools," and declared herself uncertain as to the validity of the word "Justice" standing by
Sam
sentence"; Mr.
itself in
"da smalla da
Pinsky said he was sure Mr. Kaplan meant "op-
prassed voikers of de voild, not depressed, aldough dey are deprassed too,"
which Mr. Kaplan replied, "So ve bote got right, no? Don' chenge " 'deprassed,' only add 'opprassed.' Then Mr. Parkhill went ahead with his own corrections, changing to
Through the head, murmuring "Mine
tenses, substituting prepositions, adding the definite article.
whole barrage Mr. Kaplan kept shaking
his
gootness!" each time a correction was made. But he smiled
He seemed
to
all
the while.
be proud of the very number of errors he had made; of the
labor to which the class was being forced in his service; of the fact that his ideas, his creation,
the composition took
more
could survive so concerted an onslaught.
more
And
as
respectable form, Mr. Kaplan's smile grew
expansive.
"Now,
want to spend a few minutes explaining something about adjectives. Mr. Kaplan uses the phrase er 'most bad.' That's wrong. There is a word for 'most bad.' It is what we call the superlative form of 'bad.' " Mr. Parkhill explained the use of the positive, comparative, and superlative forms of the adjective. " 'Tall, class," said
Mr.
Parkhill, "I
—
—
taller, tallest.' 'Rich, richer, richest.' Is
that clear? Well then, let us try a
few others."
The
took up the
class
game with enthusiasm. Miss Mitnick submit-
ted "dark, darker, darkest"; Mr. Scymzak, "fat, fatter, fattest."
"But there are certain exceptions to
went on. The
this general
form," Mr. Parkhill
which had long ago learned to respect that gamin. The Exception to the Rule, nodded solemnly. "For instance, we don't say 'good, gooder, goodest,' do we?" "No, sir!" cried Mr. Kaplan impetuously. " 'Good, gooder, goodest?'
Ha!
It's
"We
class,
to leff!"
say that X, for example,
Parkhill arched
is
good. Y, however,
an eyebrow interrogatively.
"Batter!" said
Mr. Kaplan.
is
—
?"
Mr.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l68
And Z is—?"
"Right!
"High-cless!"
Mr. Parkhill's eyebrow dropped. "No," he said sadly. "Not high-cless?" asked Mr. Kaplan incredulously. For him there was no word more superlative. "No, Mr. Kaplan, the word is 'best.' And the word 'bad,' of which you tried to use the superlative form ... It isn't 'bad, badder, baddest.' and what's the comparative? Anyone?" It's 'bad' "Worse," volunteered Mr. Bloom. .
.
.
"Correct! "
And
the superlative?
Z
is
Bloom
'Worse' also?" asked Mr.
the
—
?"
was evident he had sound between the compara-
hesitantly. It
never distinguished the fine difference in
and superlative forms of "bad." "No, Mr. Bloom. It's not the same word, although it a good deal like it. Anyone? Come, come. It isn't hard. X ?" worse, and Z is the
tive
— — sounds er
is
bad,
Y
is
—
An
embarrassed silence
been using "worse"
for
fell
upon the
class,
which, apparently, had
both the comparative and superlative
all
along.
Miss Mitnick blushed and played with her pencil. Mr. Bloom shrugged, conscious that he had given his
mouth open, "Bad
—
all.
Mr. Kaplan stared
the board, his
at
a desperate concentration in his eye.
What
worse.
is
the word you use
when you mean
'most
bad'?"
"Aha!" cried Mr. Kaplan suddenly. it
signified that a great light
So
easy!
Ach!
I
should
know
had
fallen
dat ven
I
When
on him.
Mr. Kaplan cried "Aha!" "I
vas wridink!
know!
Bad
—
De
exect void!
voise
—
"Yes, Mr. Kaplan!" Mr. Parkhill was definitely excited.
"Rotten!"
Mr.
Parkhill's eyes glazed
head dolorously,
as
if
He shook his And as he wrote
once more, unmistakably.
he had suffered
a personal hurt.
"w-o-r-s-t" on the blackboard there ran through his head, like a sad refrain, this latest manifestation of
worse
—
rotten;
bad
— worse ..."
Mr. Kaplan's peculiar genius: "bad
Eudora Welty WHY
I
was getting along
my
sister
I
LIVE AT THE P.O
Mama, Papa-Daddy and Uncle Rondo
fine with
Stella-Rondo just separated from her husband and
until
came back
home again. Mr. Whitaker! Of course I went with Mr. Whitaker first, when he first appeared here in China Grove, taking "Pose Yourself" photos, and Stella-Rondo broke us up. Told
on one
which
side than the other,
I'm the same. Stella-Rondo
than
am and
I
is
is
him
I
was one-sided. Bigger
a deliberate, calculated falsehood:
exactly twelve
months
to the
day younger
for that reason she's spoiled.
She's always had anything in the world she wanted and then she'd
throw
it
away. Papa-Daddy gave her this gorgeous Add-a-Pearl necklace
when she was eight years old and she threw it away playing baseball when she was nine, with only two pearls. So as soon as she got married and moved away from home the first thing she did was separate! From Mr. Whitaker! This photographer with the popeyes she said she trusted. Came home from one of those towns up
in Illinois
Mama
and
to
our complete surprise brought
said she like to
made her drop dead
this child of two.
for a second.
"Here you
had this marvelous blonde child and never so much as wrote your mother a word about it," says Mama. "I'm thoroughly ashamed of you." But of course she wasn't. Stella-Rondo just calmly takes off this hat, I wish you could see it. She says, "Why, Mama, Shirley-T.'s adopted, I can prove it." "How?" says Mama, but all I says was, "H'm!" There I was over the hot stove, trying to stretch two chickens over five people and a comunexpected child into the bargain, without one moment's notice. "What do you mean 'H'm!'?" says Stella-Rondo, and Mama says,
pletely
"I
heard that. Sister."
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
lyo I
said that oh,
I
didn't
mean
a thing, only that
was, she was the spit-image of Papa-Daddy
which of course he'd never do and sulks.
in the world.
he'd cut off his beard,
if
Papa-Daddy's Mama's papa
Stella-Rondo got furious! She said, "Sister,
you got
a lot of nerve
"Very well,"
and always did have and
my
future reference to I
whoever Shirley-T.
don't need to
I
I'll
thank you to
you make no tell
adopted child whatsoever."
"Very
said.
well, very well.
Of
course
noticed at
I
once she looks like Mr. Whitaker's side too. That frown. She looks like a cross between Mr. Whitaker and Papa-Daddy." "Well, all I can say is she isn't." "She looks exactly like Shirley Temple to me," says Mama, but Shirley-T. just ran away from her. So the first thing Stella-Rondo did at the table was turn Papa-Daddy against me.
"Papa-Daddy," she
Daddy!"
I
He was
says.
was taken completely by
up his meat. "PapaPapa-Daddy is about a mil-
trying to cut
surprise.
lion years old and's got this long-long beard.
she
Sister says
why you don't cut off your beard." So Papa-Daddy 1-a-y-s down his knife and fork! He's
fails
Mama You
"Papa-Daddy,
to understand
says
he
is,
he says he
don't understand
"Why,"
I
says,
why
I
isn't.
So he
don't cut off
says,
my
"Papa-Daddy, of course
"Have
I
real rich.
heard correctly?
beard?" I
understand,
I
did not say
any such of a thing, the idea!"
He I
says,
says,
"Hussy!"
"Papa-Daddy, you know
cut off your beard than the
from
my
man
mind! Stella-Rondo
wouldn't any more want you to
I
in the
sat there
moon.
It
was the farthest thing
and made that up while she was
eating breast of chicken."
"So the postmistress fails to understand why I don't cut off my beard. Which job I got you through my influence with the government. 'Bird's nest' is that what you call it?"
But he
says,
—
Not
that
it
isn't
the next to smallest P.O. in the entire state of
Mississippi.
"Oh, Papa-Daddy," I says, "I didn't say any such of a thing, I never dreamed it was a bird's nest, I have always been grateful though this is the next to smallest P.O. in the state of Mississippi, and I do not I
says,
enjoy being referred to as a hussy by
But Stella-Rondo
says, "Yes,
my own
"
grandfather.
you did say
it
world could of heard you, that had ears."
"Stop right there," says
Mama,
looking at me.
too.
Anybody
in the
Eudora Welty
So left
I
pulled
my
171
napkin straight back through the napkin ring and
the table.
was out of the room Mama says, "Call her back, or she'll starve to death," but Papa-Daddy says, "This is the beard I started growing on the Coast when I was fifteen years old." He would of gone on till nightfall if Shirley-T. hadn't lost the Milky Way she ate in Cairo. As soon
as
I
So Papa-Daddy says, "I am going out and lie in the hammock, and you can all sit here and remember my words: I'll never cut off my beard as long as I live, even one inch, and I don't appreciate it in you at all." Passed right by me in the hall and went straight out and got in the
hammock. It
would be
a holiday.
It
wasn't five minutes before Uncle
Rondo
suddenly appeared in the hall in one of Stella-Rondo's flesh-colored
kimonos,
all
cut on the bias,
like
something Mr. Whitaker probably
thought was gorgeous.
"Uncle Rondo!"
I
says. "I didn't
know who
Where
that was!
are
you
going?" "Sister,"
he
says, "get
out of
my way,
I'm poisoned."
"Keep out of the hammock. Papa-Daddy will certainly beat you on the head if you come within forty miles of him. He thinks I deliberately said he ought to cut off his beard after he got me the P.O., and I've told him and told him and told him, and he acts like he just don't hear me. Papa-Daddy must "If you're
poisoned stay away from Papa-Daddy,"
I
says.
of gone stone deaf."
"He picked
a fine
day to do
it
then," says Uncle Rondo, and before
you could say "Jack Robinson" flew out in the yard. What he'd really done, he'd drunk another bottle of that prescription. He does it every single Fourth of July as sure as shooting, and it's horribly expensive. Then he falls over in the hammock and snores. So he insisted on zigzagging right on out to the hammock, looking like a half-wit.
Papa-Daddy woke up with this horrible yell and right there without moving an inch he tried to turn Uncle Rondo against me. I heard every word he said. Oh, he told Uncle Rondo I didn't learn to read till I was eight years old and he didn't see how in the world I ever got the mail put up at the P.O., much less read it all, and he said if Uncle Rondo could only fathom the lengths he had gone to to get me that job! And he said on the other hand he thought Stella-Rondo had a brilliant mind and deserved credit for getting out of town. All the time he was just lying there swinging as pretty as you please and looping out his beard, and poor Uncle Rondo was pleading with him to slow down the hammock, it
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
172
was making him
as dizzy as a witch to
good case of
I
that's
what Papa-
mind. Ask anybody.
A certified
get is
a
pharmacist.
heard Stella-Rondo raising the upstairs window. While
she was married she got
this peculiar idea that
dows shut and locked. So she has
make
But
a
a one-track
Just then
it.
hammock. So Uncle Rondo was too dizzy to me for the time being. He's Mama's only brother and
Daddy Hkes about turned against
watch
to raise the
it's
cooler with the win-
window before she can
a soul hear her outdoors.
So she raises the window and says, "O/i/" You would have thought she was mortally wounded. Uncle Rondo and Papa-Daddy didn't even look up, but kept right on with what they were doing. I had to laugh. I flew up the stairs and threw the door open! I says, "What in the wide world's the matter, Stella-Rondo? You mortally wounded?" "No," she says, "I am not mortally wounded but I wish you would do me the favor of looking out that window there and telling me what you
see."
So
I
shade
"I see
my
eyes and look out the window.
the front yard,"
"Don't you see any
I
says.
human
beings?" she says.
Uncle Rondo trying to run Papa-Daddy out of the hammock," I says. "Nothing more. Naturally, it's so suffocating-hot in the house, with all the windows shut and locked, everybody who cares to stay in their right mind will have to go out and get in the hammock before the Fourth of July is over." "Don't you notice anything different about Uncle Rondo?" asks "I see
Stella-Rondo.
"Why, no, except contraption
I
he's got
on some
wouldn't be found dead
in,
terrible-looking flesh-colored
is all I
can see,"
I
says.
"Never mind, you won't be found dead in it, because it happens to be part of my trousseau, and Mr. Whitaker took several dozen photographs of me in it," says Stella-Rondo. "What on earth could Uncle Rondo mean by wearing part of my trousseau out in the broad open daylight without saying so much as 'Kiss my foot,' knowing I only got home this morning after my separation and hung my negligee up on the bathroom door, just as nervous as I could be?" "I'm sure I don't know, and what do you expect me to do about it?" I says. "Jump out the window?" "No, I expect nothing of the kind. I simply declare that Uncle Rondo looks like a fool in it, that's all," she says. "It makes me sick to my stomach."
Eudora Welty "Well, he looks as good as he can,"
I
173 says.
"As good as anybody in
Uncle Rondo, please remember. And I said to Stella-Rondo, "I think I would do well not to criticize so freely if I were you and came home with a two-year-old child I had never said a word about, and no explanation whatever about my separation." reason could.
"
stood
I
up
for
asked you the instant
"I
my
time to
I
entered this house not to refer one
adopted child, and you gave
me
more
your word of honor you
would not," was all Stella-Rondo would say, and started pulling out every one of her eyebrows with some cheap Kress tweezers. So I merely slammed the door behind me and went down and made some green-tomato pickle. Somebody had to do it. Of course Mama had turned both the Negroes loose; she always said no earthly power could hold one anyway on the Fourth of July, so she wouldn't even try. It turned out that Jaypan fell in the lake and came within a very narrow limit of
drowning.
So for
Mama
trots in. Lifts
your Uncle Rondo in
httle
adopted Shirley-T.
That made her lucky
stars
me it
says,
"H'm! Not very good
Shame on
tired.
I
I
must
say.
Or poor
you!"
says, "Well,
Stella-Rondo had better thank
me came trotting in with that had been me that trotted in from
was her instead of
and brought
of the reception
and
lid
his precarious condition,
very peculiar-looking child. Illinois
up the
I'd
Now
if it
a peculiar-looking child of two,
of got,
much
less
I
shudder to think
controlled the diet of an entire
family."
"But you must remember.
you were never married to Mr. Whitaker in the first place and didn't go up to Illinois to live," says Mama, shaking a spoon in my face. "If you had I would of been just as overjoyed to see you and your little adopted girl as I was to see StellaRondo, when you wound up with your separation and came on back home." "You would not," I says. "Don't contradict me, I would," says Mama. But I said she couldn't convince me though she talked till she was blue in the face. Then I said, "Besides, you know as well as I do that that child
is
Sister, that
not adopted."
"She most certainly
is
adopted," says
Mama,
stiff as
a poker.
"Why, Mama, Stella-Rondo had her just as sure as anything in this world, and just too stuck up to admit it." "Why, Sister," said Mama. "Here I thought we were going to have a pleasant Fourth of July, and you start right out not believing a word I
your
says,
own baby
sister tells
you!"
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
174
Cousin Annie
"Just like
Flo.
Went
to her grave
remind Mama. "I told you if you ever mentioned Annie face," says Mama, and slaps my face. "All right, you wait and see," I says.
denying the
facts of
life," I
"I," says
Mama,
"J prefer to take
my
humanly possible." You ought hundred pounds and has real tiny feet.
when
it's
Just then
name
Flo's
children's
to see
I'd slap
word
Mama,
for
your
anything
she weighs two
something perfectly horrible occurred to me.
"Mama," I says, "can that child talk?" I simply had to whisper! "Mama, I wonder if that child can be you know in any way? Do you
—
—
realize,"
human looked
I
she hasn't spoken one single, solitary word to a
says, "that
being up to
this
minute? This
is
the
way she
looks,"
I
says,
and
I
like this.
Well,
Mama
and
I
just
stood there and stared at each other.
It
was
horrible. "I
says
remember
Mama.
"I
well that Joe Whitaker frequently drank like a fish,"
believed to
my
soul he drank chemicals."
another word she marches to the foot of the
stairs
and
And without calls
Stella-
Rondo. "Stella-Rondo? O-o-o-o-o! Stella-Rondo!"
"What?" says Stella-Rondo from
up
upstairs.
Not even the grace
to get
off the bed.
"Can
that child of yours talk?" asks
Mama.
Stella-Rondo says, "Can she what?"
Mama. "Burdyburdyburdyburdy!" So Stella-Rondo yells back, "Who says she can't talk?" "Sister says so," says Mama. "You didn't have to tell me, I know whose word of honor don't mean a thing in this house," says Stella-Rondo. And in a minute the loudest Yankee voice I ever heard in my life yells out, "OE'm Pop-OE the Sailor-r-r-r Ma-a-an!" and then somebody jumps up and down in the upstairs hall. In another second the house "Talk! Talk!" says
would of fallen down. "Not only talks, she can tap-dance!"
calls
Stella-Rondo.
more than some people I won't name can do." "Why, the little precious darling thing!" Mama "Just as smart as she
can be!"
upstairs this instant
and apologize
"Apologize for what?"
I
baby
says, so surprised.
talk right there.
and Shirley-T." merely wondered if the child was
to Stella-Rondo
says. "I
is
Then be thoroughly ashamed! Run
Starts talking
she turns on me. "Sister, you ought to
"Which
Eudora Welty normal,
that's
all.
Now
175
that she's proved she
why,
is,
have nothing
I
further to say."
But
Mama
right upstairs
Rondo
just
turned on her heel and flew out, furious. She ran
and hugged the baby. She believed
hadn't done a thing but turn her against
stood there helpless over the hot stove. So that
was adopted.
it
me
Stella-
from upstairs while
I
made Mama, Papa-Daddy
and the baby all on Stella-Rondo's side. Next, Uncle Rondo. I must say that Uncle Rondo has been marvelous to me at various times in the past and I was completely unprepared to be made to jump out of my skin, the way it turned out. Once Stella-Rondo did something broke a chain letter from Flanders Field perfectly horrible to him and he took the radio back he had given her and gave it to me. StellaRondo was furious! For six months we all had to call her Stella instead of Stella-Rondo, or she wouldn't answer. I always thought Uncle Rondo had all the brains of the entire family. Another time he sent me to
—
Mammoth But
Cave, with
all
expenses paid.
would be the day he was drinking that
this
prescription, the
Fourth of July.
So
supper Stella-Rondo speaks up and says she thinks Uncle
at
Rondo ought
to try to eat a
little
Uncle Rondo said and ketchup, but that was all. So she
something. So
finally
he would try a little cold biscuits brought it to him. "Do you think it wise to disport with ketchup in Stella-Rondo's flesh-colored kimono?" I says. Trying to be considerate! If Stella-Rondo couldn't watch out for her trousseau, somebody had to. "Any objections?" asks Uncle Rondo, just about to pour out all the ketchup.
"Don't mind what she says. Uncle Rondo," says Stella-Rondo. "Sister
has been devoting
window
at
the
this solid
way you
afternoon to sneering out
my bedroom
"
look.
"What's that?" says Uncle Rondo. Uncle Rondo has got the most terrible
temper
house down
if it
comes
So Stella-Rondo look
Anything
in the world.
like a fool in that
at the
wrong
is
Do you remember who
it
was
make him
tear the
time.
says, "Sister says,
pink kimono!'
liable to
'Uncle
Rondo
certainly does
"
really said that?
Uncle Rondo spills out all the ketchup and jumps out of his chair and tears off the kimono and throws it down on the dirty floor and puts his foot on it. It had to be sent all the way to Jackson to the cleaners and re-pleated.
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
176
"So
your opinion of your Uncle Rondo,
he says. "I look like a fool, do I? Well, that's the last straw. A whole day in this house with nothing to do, and then to hear you come out with a remark like that behind my back!" "I didn't say any such of a thing. Uncle Rondo," I says, "and I'm not saying who did, either. Why, I think you look all right. Just try to take care of yourself and not talk and eat at the same time," I says. "I think you better go lie down." "Lie down my foot," says Uncle Rondo. I ought to of known by that he was fixing to do something perfectly horrible. So he didn't do anything that night in the precarious state he was in just played Casino with Mama and Stella-Rondo and Shirley-T. and gave Shirley-T. a nickel with a head on both sides. It tickled her nearly to death, and she called him "Papa." But at 6:30 a.m. the next morning, he threw a whole five-cent package of some unsold one-inch firecrackers from the store as hard as he could into my bedroom and they every one went off. Not one bad one in the string. Anybody else, there 'd be one that's
is
it?"
—
that wouldn't go off.
Well, I'm just terribly susceptible to noise of any kind, the doctor
has always told his
whole
life,
they heard
it
me
and
I I
was the most sensitive person he had ever seen
was simply prostrated.
I
couldn't eat! People
tell
in
me
cemetery, and old Aunt Jep Patterson, that had so good, thought it was Judgment Day and she
as far as the
been holding her own was going to meet her whole family. It's usually so quiet here. And I'll tell you it didn't take me any longer than a minute to make up my mind what to do. There I was with the whole entire house on Stella-Rondo's side and turned against me. If I have anything at all I have pride.
So
room
I
just
decided
I'd
there in the back, Well!
was up
to.
I I
I
go straight
down
to the P.O. There's plenty of
says to myself.
made no bones about didn't try to conceal
letting the family catch
on
to
what
I
it.
The first thing they knew, I marched in where they were Old Maid and pulled the electric oscillating fan out by the
all
playing
plug,
and
done the needlepoint on right off the davenport from behind Papa-Daddy. He went "Ugh!" I beat Stella-Rondo up the stairs and finally found my charm bracelet in her bureau drawer under a picture of Nelson Eddy. "So that's the way the land lies," says Uncle Rondo. There he was, piecing on the ham. "Well, Sister, I'll be glad to donate my army cot if you got any place to set it up, providing you'll leave right this minute and let me get some peace." Uncle Rondo was in France. everything got real hot. Next
I
snatched the pillow
I'd
Eudora Welty
"Thank you select
if
I
bedroom," to forget
had I
my
177
kindly for the cot and 'peace'
is
to resort to firecrackers at 6:30
would a.m. in a young girl's intend to go, you seem
where I postmistress of China Grove,
says back to him.
position as
"And
hardly the word
as to
I
Mississippi,"
I
says.
"
"I've always got the
Well, that
P.O.
made them
went out front and around the P.O. I
"Ah-ah-ah!" says
my
four-o'clocks.
known you
to
all sit
started
Mama,
up and take notice. digging up some four-o'clocks
raising the
window. "Those happen
Everything planted in that
make anything grow
in
to plant
your
star
is
mine.
I've
to
be
never
life."
Even you. Mama, can't stand there and deny that I'm the one watered that fern. And I happen to know where I can send in a box top and get a packet of one thousand mixed seeds, not two the same kind, free." "Very well,"
I
says.
"But
I
take the fern.
"Oh, where?" Mama wants to know. But I says, "Too late. You 'tend to your house and I'll 'tend to mine. You hear things like that all the time if you know how to listen to the radio. Perfectly marvelous offers. Get anything you want free." So I hope to tell you I marched in and got that radio, and they could of
all bit
a nail in two, especially Stella-Rondo, that
it
used to
and she well knew she couldn't get it back, I'd sue for it like a shot. And I very politely took the sewing-machine motor I helped pay the most on to give Mama for Christmas back in 1929, and a good big calendar, with the first-aid remedies on it. The thermometer and the Hawaiian ukulele certainly were rightfully mine, and I stood on the stepladder and got all my watermelon-rind preserves and every fruit and vegetable I'd put up, every jar. Then I began to pull the tacks out of the bluebird wall vases on the archway to the dining room. "Who told you you could have those, Miss Priss?" says Mama, belong
to,
fanning as hard as she could.
bought 'em and I'll keep track of 'em," I says. "I'll tack 'em up one on each side the post-office window, and you can see 'em when you come to ask me for your mail, if you're so dead to see 'em." "Not I! I'll never darken the door to that post office again if I live to be a hundred," Mama says. "Ungrateful child! After all the money we spent on you at the Normal." "Me either," says Stella-Rondo. "You can just let my mail lie there and rot, for all I care. I'll never come and relieve you of a single, solitary "I
piece." "I
should worry,"
and write you
all
I
says.
those big
"And who you
fat letters
think's going to
sit
down
and postcards, by the way? Mr.
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
lyS
Whitaker? Just because he was the only man ever dropped down in China Grove and you got him unfairly is he going to sit down and write you
—
—
you come home giving no rhyme nor reason whatsoever for your separation and no explanation for the presence of that child? I may not have your brilliant mind, but I fail to see a lengthy correspondence after
it."
So
Mama
Rondo simply
says, "Sister, I've told
got homesick, and this child
why
she says, "Now,
Then
don't you
Shirley-T.
horrible way.
you a thousand times that
sticks
all just sit
far too big to
down and
out her tongue
She has no more manners than was going to cross her eyes
told her she
is
Stella-
be hers," and
play Casino?"
me in this perfectly the man in the moon. I at
like that
some day and
they'd
stick.
yesterday. I'm going to
me
is
me
to visit
me
now," I says. "You should have tried that the P.O. and the only way you can possibly see
too late to stop
"It's
there."
So Papa-Daddy says, "You'll never catch me setting foot in that post office, even if I should take a notion into my head to write a letter some place." He says, "I won't have you reachin' out of that little old window with a pair of shears and cuttin' off any beard of mine. I'm too smart for you!"
"We But
all I
are," says Stella-Rondo.
said, "If you're so smart,
where's Mr. Whitaker?"
So then Uncle Rondo says, "I'll thank you from now on to stop reading all the orders I get on postcards and telling everybody in China Grove what you think is the matter with them, but I says, "I draw my own conclusions and will continue in the future to draw them. I says, "If people want to write their inmost secrets on penny postcards, there's nothing in the wide world you can do about it, Uncle Rondo." "And if you think we'll ever write another postcard you're sadly "
"
mistaken," says
Mama.
"Cutting off your nose to spite your face then," all
says.
"But
if
you're
determined to have no more to do with the U.S. mail, think of
What come
will
Stella-Rondo do now,
if
she wants to
tell
this:
Mr. Whitaker
to
after her?"
"Wah!" fit
I
says Stella-Rondo.
I
knew
she'd cry.
She had
a conniption
right there in the kitchen. "It will
now
—
I
am
be interesting to see how long she holds out,"
I
says.
"And
leaving.
"Good-bye,
"Oh,
I
"
"
says
Uncle Rondo.
declare," says
Mama,
"to think that a family of
mine should
Eudora Welty
179
on the Fourth of July, or the day after, over Stella-Rondo leaving old Mr. Whitaker and having the sweetest little adopted child! It looks quarrel
like
we'd
be glad!"
all
"Wah!" says Stella-Rondo, and has a fresh conniption fit. "He left her you mark my words," I says. "That's Mr. Whitaker. I know Mr. Whitaker. After all, I knew him first. I said from the beginning he'd up and leave her. I foretold every single thing that's happened." "Where did he go?" asks Mama. "Probably to the North Pole, if he knows what's good for him," I
—
says.
But Stella-Rondo just bawled and wouldn't say another word. She flew to her room and slammed the door.
"Now
Mama. "You
look what you've gone and done, Sister," says
go apologize." "I
haven't got time, I'm leaving,"
says.
I
"Well, what are you waiting around for?" asks Uncle Rondo.
So
I
picked up the kitchen clock and marched
just
my
saying "Kiss
foot" or anything, and never did
tell
without
off,
Stella-Rondo good-
bye.
There was a "Girl,"
I
girl
says,
going along on a
little
wagon
"come help me haul these
right in front.
things
down
the
hill,
I'm
"
going to
live in
the post office.
Took her nine
trips in
on the porch and threw her
her express wagon. Uncle a nickel. •
•
And laid eyes
that's
on
the
eyes
last I've laid
me for five
Rondo came out
and
solid days
•
my
family
may be
telling
on any of my family or nights. Stella-Rondo
the most horrible tales in the world about Mr. Whitaker, but
heard them. As
I
tell
everybody,
I
draw
my own
I
haven't
conclusions.
been saying. You see, I've got everything eater-cornered, the way I like it. Hear the radio? All the war news. Radio, sewing machine, book ends, ironing board and that great big piano lamp peace, that's what I like. Butter-bean vines planted all along the front where the strings are. But oh,
I
like
it
here.
It's
ideal, as I've
—
Of course,
there's not
much
people in China Grove, and earth, for
all
if
mail.
My family are naturally the main
they prefer to vanish from the face of the
the mail they get or the mail they write, why, I'm not going
open my mouth. Some of the folks here in town are taking up for me and some turned against me. I know which is which. There are always people who will quit buying stamps just to get on the right side of PapaDaddy. to
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l8o
But here
I
am, and here
I'll
stay.
I
want the world
to
know I'm
happy.
And
if
Stella-Rondo should
come
to
me
knees, and attempt to explain the incidents of her I'd
simply put
my
fingers in
both
my
ears
minute, on bended
this life
and refuse
with Mr. Whitaker,
to listen.
Peter de Vries REQUIEM FOR A NOUN, OR INTRUDER IN THE DUSK
(what can come of trying to read WILLIAM FAULKNER WHILE MINDING A CHILD, OR VICE VERSA)
The
cold Brussels sprout rolled off the page of the book
I
was reading
and defunctive in my lap. Turning my head with a leisure at least three-fourths impotent rage, I saw him standing there holding the toy with which he had catapulted the vegetable, or rather the reverse, and
lay inert
the toy
first
then the
fat insolent fist
clutching
it
and then above that the
bland defiant face beneath the shock of black hair
like tangible gas. It,
the toy, was one of those cardboard funnels with a trigger near the point for firing a small celluloid ball. Letting the cold Brussels sprout lie there in
my
lap for
pull at a
him
anyhow apprehend rebuke from, I took a had had in my hand and then set it down on
to absorb or
Scotch highball
I
the end table beside me.
"So instead of losing the shooter which would have been a mercy
you had
to lose the ball,"
I
said, fixing
with a stern eye what
I
had
and biding dust; remembering with that retroactive memory by which we count chimes seconds and even minutes after they have struck (recapitulate, even, the very grinding of the bowels of the clock before and during and after) the cunning furtive click, clicks rather, which perception should have told me then already were not the trigger plied but the icebox opened. "Even a boy of five going on six should have more respect for his father if not for food," I said, now picking the cold Brussels sprout out of my lap and setting it not dropping it, setting it in an ashtray; thinking how across the wax bland treachery of the kitchen linoleum were now in all likelihood distributed fathered out of
all
sentient
—
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l82
the remnants of string beans and cold potatoes and
maybe even
tapioca.
"You're no son of mine." I
took up the thread of the book again or tried
to:
the weft of
enough without the obbligato of that dark other: the sixteenths and thirty-seconds and even sixty-fourths of dishonoring cousinships brewed out of the violable blood by the ineffacelegitimate kinship that was intricate
able errant lusts.
Then
I
heard another
click; a faint metallic
rejoinder
that this time was neither the trigger nor the icebox but the front door
opened and then
shut.
Through the window
I
saw him picking
over the season's soiled and sun-frayed vestiges of snow rotted lace, the
cheap upended toy cone
in
one hand and
like
his
way
shreds of
a child's card-
board suitcase in the other, toward the road. I
dropped the book and went out
only that
I
was
in shirtsleeves but that
flanks in twin festoons.
tulant
"Where
and forlorn on the warm
him who had forgotten not my braces hung down over my
after
are you going?"
numb
air.
I
Then
called, I
my
caught
it:
voice expos-
caught
it
in
the succinct outrage of the suitcase and the prim churning rear and
marching heels as well: I had said he was no son of mine, and so he was leaving a house not only where he was not wanted but where he did not even belong. "I see," I said in that shocked clarity with which we perceive the truth instantaneous and entire out of the very astonishment that refuses to acknowledge it. "Just as you now cannot be sure of any roof you belong more than half under, you figure there is no housetop from which you might not as well begin to shout it. Is that it?" Something was trying to tell me something. Watching him turn off on the road and that not only with the ostensible declaration of vagabondage but already its very assumption, attaining as though with a single footfall the very apotheosis of wandering just as with a single shutting of a door he had that of renunciation and farewell-watching him turn off on it, the road, in the direction of the Permisangs', our nearest neighbors, I thought Wait; no; what I said was not enough for him to leave the house on; it must have been the blurted inscrutable chance confirmation of something he already knew, and was half able to assess, either out of the blown facts of boyhood or pure male divination or both. "What is it you know?" I said springing forward over the delicate squalor of the snow and falling in beside the boy. "Does any man come to the house to see your mother when I'm away, that you know of?" Thinking We are mocked, first by the old mammalian snare, then, snared,
—
by the final unilaterality of all flesh to which birth
is
given; not only not
knowing when we may be cuckolded, but not even sure that
in the veins
Peter de Vries
183
of the very bantling we dandle does not flow the miscreant sniggering
wayward
blood.
"I get
it
now,"
said,
I
catching in the undeviating face just as
I
had
prim back and marching heels the steady articulation of disdain.
in the
"Cuckoldry
is
something of which the victim may be
as guilty as the
wrong-doers. That's what you're thinking? That by letting in this taint
upon our
heritage
I
am
as
accountable as she or they
Though
actual avatars. More.
the foe
may
who have been
its
survive, the sleeping sentinel
must be shot. Is that it?" "You talk funny." Mother-and-daughter blood conspires
in the old
mammalian
Father-and-son blood vies in the ancient phallic enmity. the
arm and we
I
scuffled in the snow. "I will be heard,"
office.
caught him by I
said,
holding
though we might be dancing, my voice intimate and furious against the furious sibilance of our feet in the snow. Thinking how revelation had had to be inherent in the very vegetable scraps to which venery was probably that instant contriving to abandon me, the cold boiled despair of whatever already featureless suburban Wednesday Thursday or Saturday supper the shot green was the remainder. "I see another thing," I panted, cursing my helplessness to curse whoever it was had given him blood and wind. Thinking He's glad; glad to credit what is always secretly fostered and fermented out of the vats of childhood fantasy anyway (for all childhood must conceive a substitute for the father
him now
as
that has conceived
(finding that other inconceivable?); thinking
it
walking in a nursery
fairy tale to find the
yon 'You're no son of mine' so any father to me.'
king his
sire.
now you answer back
"Just as
I
He
is
said to
'Neither are you
"
it had begun. He had dropped and he broke away and adjusting his grip on the suitcase which he had not, this time faster and
The scherzo
of violence ended as abruptly as
walked on, after retrieving the toy
more
urgently. •
The
•
•
was seeping out of the shabby sky, after the hemorrhage of sunset. High in the west where the fierce constellations soon would wheel, the evening star in single bombast burned and burned. The boy passed the Permisangs' without going in, then passed the Kellers'.
their
last light
Maybe house
he's
heading for the McCullums',
too.
Then
there, his search will
house
he, we, neared the
end
there,
this side of the tracks.
me something.
I
I
thought, but he passed
Jelliffs'.
He's got to be going
thought. Because that was the
And because something was
last
trying to tell
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
184
"Were you maybe thinking of what you heard and
me
ulation.
having relations in Spuyten Duyvil?"
I
said
about Mrs.
Jelliff
said in rapid frantic spec-
"But they were talking about mutual kin
— nothing
else."
The
had sensed it instant and complete: the boy felt that, whatever of offense his mother may or may not have given, his father had given provocation; and out of the old embattled malehood, it was the hairy ineluctable Him whose guilt and shame he was going to boy
said nothing.
But
I
hold preponderant. Because
"So
it's
Mrs.
Jelliff
now
— Sue
I
remembered.
Jelliff
— and me you have got
this all
mixed
up with," I said, figuring he must, in that fat sly nocturnal stealth that took him creeping up and down the stairs to listen when he should have been in bed, certainly have heard his mother exclaiming to his father behind that bedroom door it had been vain to close since it was not sound-proof: "I saw you. I saw that with Sue. There may not be anything between you but you'd like there to be! Maybe there is at that!" Now like a dentist forced to ruin sound enamel to reach decayed I had to risk telling him what he did not know to keep what he assuredly did in relative control.
"This
is
what happened on the night
in question,"
I
said. "It
was
under the mistletoe, during the Holidays, at the Jelliffs'. Wait! I will be heard out! See your father as he is, but see him in no baser light. He has his arms around his neighbor's wife. It is evening, in the heat and huddled spiced felicity of the year's end, under the mistletoe (where as well as anywhere else the thirsting and exasperated flesh might be visited by the futile pangs and jets of later lust, the omnivorous aches of fifty and
what may be the last of the allotted lips). Your father seems to prolong beyond its usual moment's span that custom's usufruct. Only for an instant, but in that instant letting trickle through the fissures of appearance what your mother and probably Rudy Jelliff too saw as an earnest of a flood that would have devoured that house and one four doors away." A moon hung over the eastern roofs like a phantasmal bladder. Somewhere an icicle crashed and splintered, fruits of the day's thaw. "So now I've got it straight," I said. "Just as through some nameless father your mother has cuckolded me (you think), so through one of Rudy Jelliffs five sons I have probably cuckolded him. Which would give you at least a half brother under that roof where under ours you have none at all. So you balance out one miscreance with another, and find your rightful kin in our poor weft of all the teeming random bonded forty
and even
thirty-five to seize
sentient dust." Shifting the grip, the boy walked
on past the
Jelliffs'.
Before him
Peter de Vries
the tracks; and beyond that
— the other
185
side of the tracks.
of whatever reserve capacity for astonished increduhty
And now out may yet have
and ultimate outrage. But he didn't cross. Along our own side of the tracks ran a road which the boy turned left on. He paused before a lighted house near the corner, a white cottage with a shingle in the window which I knew from familiarity to read, "Viola Pruett, Piano Lessons," and which, like a violently unscrambled remained
pattern
I
on
prepared to face
now came
a screen,
Memory adumbrates shingle
made
mother hearing.
.
to focus.
just as expectation recalls.
.
which had
Pruett,"
I
fallen short
stay with Buzzie Pruett overnight.
him
in that little suitcase of his. If
take
the
him over when
I
then of the threshold of
remembered now. "He's going
and
I'll
The name on
audible to listening recollection the last words of the boy's
as she'd left, ".
this last
get back,"
recapitulation of retroactive
.
.
.
Can
to
have supper
take a few things with
Mrs. Pruett phones about I
recalled
memory
now in
— better
it,
just say
that chime-counting
than which
I
could not
have been expected to do. Because the eternal Who-instructs might have got through to the whiskey-drinking husband or might have got through to the reader
immersed
in that prose vertiginous intoxicant
and unique,
but not to both.
you were taken much till it was time but had to sneak off by yourself, and that not crossbut up the road I've told you a hundred times to keep off even the "So
less lots
that's it,"
I
said.
"You couldn't wait
till
shoulder of."
The boy had stopped and now appeared to hesitate before the house. He turned around at last, switched the toy and the suitcase in his hands, and started back in the direction he had come.
"What "More
are
you going back
for
now?"
I
stuff to take in this suitcase,"
sleep at the Pruetts' overnight, but stay there for good."
now
asked.
he
said. "I
was going to
I'm going to ask
them
to let
just
me
Flann O'Brien (Myles na Gopaleen)
KEATS AND CHAPMAN
O'Nolan wrote under the pen names Flann O'Brien and Myles na Gopaleen. He was, S. J. Perelman once wrote, "The best comic writer I can think of. Following, some excerpts from the column he wrote as Myles na Gopaleen. The column appeared in The Irish Times from 1939 until the author's death in Dublin on April 1, 1966.-ED.] [Brian
"
Chapman thought
Fanny Brawne, and often said so. "Do you know," he remarked one day, "that girl of yours is a sight a lot of Keats 's
girl,
for sore eyes."
"She stupes
to conquer,
you mean," Keats
said.
LITERARY CORNER
Chapman was once complaining to Keats about the eccentric behaviour of a third party who had rented a desolate stretch of coast and engaged an architect to build a fantastic castle on it. Chapman said that no sane person could think of living in so forsaken a spot, but Keats was more inclined to criticise the rich man on the score of the architect he had chosen, a young man of "advanced ideas and negligible experience. Chapman persisted that the site was impossible, and that this third party was a fool. "
"His B.Arch.
is
worse than
his bight," Keats said.
A GLIMPSE OF KEATS Keats and Chapman were conversing one day on the street, and what they were conversing about I could not tell you. But anyway there passed a certain character who was renowned far and wide for his piety, and who was reputed to have already made his own coffin, erected it on trestles, and slept in it every night.
Flann O'Brien
187
"Did you see our friend?" Keats said. "Yes," said Chapman, wondering what was coming.
"A
terrible
man
for his bier," the poet said. •
•
Keats
named
day) had a friend
(in his
•
Byrne. Byrne was a rather decent
but he was frightfully temperamental,
Irish person,
politically unstable
and difficult to get on with, particularly if the running board of the tram was already crowded with fat women. He frightened (the life) out of his wife with his odd Marxist ideas.
"What me;
his love
shall
I
do?" she implored Keats. "Politics
mean nothing
means much."
Keats said nothing, but wrote to her that night
— "Please
to
Byrne
when Red." •
•
•
London and one day he was visited by Dr. Watson, confrere of the famous Baker Street sleuth. Watson came late in the evening accompanied by a friend and the pair of them took to Keats once bought a small pub in
hard drinking in the back snug.
When
closing time came, Keats shouted
out the usual slogans of urgent valediction such as "Time
"Time gents!," "The Licence gents!," "Fresh on now all together!" But Dr. Watson and
air
now
gents!"
his friend took
Eventually Keats put his head into the snug and roared, gents,
have yez no Holmes
The two
to
go
please!,"
and "Come
no
notice.
"Come on now
to!"
topers then left in that lofty vehicle, high dudgeon. •
•
•
A memoir of Keats. Number eighty-four. tries, also in
now
Copyright
in all civilised
coun-
"Eire" and in the Sick Counties of Northern Ireland. Pat.
Appd. For. The public is warned that copyright subsists in these epexegetic biographic addenda under warrant issued by the Ulster King of
Farms [nach maireann) and persons assailing, invading or otherwise violating such rights of copy, which are in-alienable and indefeasible, will be liable to summary disintitulement in feodo without remembrances and petty sochemaunce pendent graund plaisaunce du roi.
A Memoir of Keats.
No.
84.
Copyright.
managed to kill a sackful of fish every day. Transport was poor and he had no means of marketing the surplus, which, however, was not large. Chapman, hearing of this, presented his friend with a small mobile canning plant. (He managed to pick up, rather than buy, this machine for that odd mercantile cantata, a song.) Calling to see the poet some months later, he was astonished at Keats once rented a trout-stream and
his robust
and girthy physique.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
l88
"You must be eating a lot," Chapman making money out of the canned trout?" "I eat what I can," Keats said. •
Chapman had
"I
suppose you are
•
•
whom
he wished to put to a trade and he advice. The poet had an old relative who was a
a small cousin
approached Keats for
said.
young man as an apprentice. For the first year, however, he declined to let him do any cutting, insisting that he should first master the art of making garments up. One day Chapman accidentally spilled some boiling porridge over his only suit, ruining it completely. The same evening he had an appointment with a wealthy widow and was at his wits' end to know how he could get another suit in time. Keats suggested that the young apprentice should be called upon in the emergency. Chapman thought this a good idea and sent the apprentice an urgent message. Afterwards he had some misgivings as to the ability of a mere apprentice to produce a wearable and
tailor
suit in a
for a consideration this tailor agreed to accept the
few hours.
"He'll certainly
o'clock,"
he
"He'll
want
effort to
have
have
his
work cut out," Keats
Chapman once
•
said reassuringly.
bottle of whiskey, the
into consultation regarding the son of the house,
and
two
The
father was worried, suspecting
youngster was produced, but the two diagnosis.
When
after the host
visitors
were called
who had been
ing a disquieting redness of face and boisterousness of
make any
finished by six
•
called to see a titled friend
had hospitably produced a
of twelve.
it
said gloomily.
•
Keats and
no
to spare
manner
some dread
visitors, glass in
leaving the big house,
at the
disease.
age
The
hand, declined to
Chapman rubbed
and remarked on the cold. "I think it must be freezing and I'm glad of that drink," he the way, did you think what I thought about that youngster?" hands
exhibit-
his
briskly
"There's a nip in the heir," Keats said.
said.
"By
John Cheever THE CHASTE CLARISSA
The evening
boat for Vineyard
Haven was loading
freight.
In a
little
would separate the sheep from the goats the islanders from the tourists wanthat's the way Baxter thought of it dering through the streets of Woods Hole. His car, like all the others ticketed for the ferry, was parked near the wharf. He sat on the front bumper, smoking. The noise and movement of the small port seemed to signify that the spring had ended and that the shores of West Chop, across the Sound, were the shores of summer, but the implications of the hour and the voyage made no impression on Baxter at all. The delay bored and irritated him. When someone called his name, he got to his while, the warning whistle
—
feet with relief. It
was old Mrs. Ryan. She called
and he went over
to speak to her. "I
him from a dusty station wagon, knew it," she said. "I knew that I'd to
had that feeling in my bones. We've been traveling since nine this morning. We had trouble with the brakes outside Worcester. Now I'm wondering if Mrs. Talbot will have cleaned the house. She wanted seventy-five dollars for opening it last summer and I told her I wouldn't pay her that again, and I wouldn't be surprised if she's thrown all my letters away. Oh, I hate to have a journey end in a dirty house, but if worse comes to worst, we can clean it ourselves. Can't we, Clarissa?" she asked, turning to a young woman who sat beside her on the front seat. "Oh, excuse me, Baxter!" she exclaimed. "You haven't met Clarissa, have you? This is Bob's wife, Clarissa Ryan." Baxter's first thought was that a girl like that shouldn't have to ride in a dusty station wagon; she should have done much better. She was young. He guessed that she was about twenty-five. Red-headed, deepsee
someone here from Holly Cove.
breasted, slender, and indolent, she
I
seemed
to
belong to a different
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
190
species "
The
from old Mrs. Ryan and her large-boned, forthright daughters. Cape Cod girls, they have no combs. They comb their hair with
codfish bones,'
"
he said to himself but
Clarissa's hair
was well groomed.
Her bare arms were perfectly white. Woods Hole and the activity on the wharf seemed to bore her and she was not interested in Mrs. Ryan's insular gossip. She lighted a cigarette. At a pause in the old lady's monologue, Baxter spoke to her daughter-in-law. "When is Bob coming down, Mrs. Ryan?" he asked. "He isn't coming at all," the beautiful Clarissa said. "He's in France. He's—" "He's gone there for the government," old Mrs. Ryan interrupted, as
if
her daughter-in-law could not be entrusted with
nation. "He's working
on
this
this terribly interesting project.
simple expla-
He
won't be
back until autumn. I'm going abroad myself. I'm leaving Clarissa alone.
Of
course," she added forcefully, "I expect that she
Everyone does.
— she
I
The warning
One by
expect that she
signal
from the
will
the island.
will love
be kept very busy.
I
expect that
ferry cut her off. Baxter said goodbye.
one, the cars drove aboard, and the boat started to cross the
shoal water from the mainland to the resort. Baxter drank a beer in the
cabin and watched Clarissa and old Mrs. Ryan,
who were
on deck. Bob Ryan
sitting
Since he had never seen Clarissa before, he supposed that
must have married her during the past winter. He did not understand how this beauty had ended up with the Ryans. They were a family of passionate amateur geologists and bird-watchers. "We're all terribly keen about birds and rocks," they said when they were introduced to strangers. Their cottage was a couple of miles from any other and had, as Mrs. Ryan often said, "been thrown together out of a barn in 1922." They sailed, hiked, swam in the surf, and organized expeditions to Cuttyhunk and Tarpaulin Cove. They were people who emphasized corpore sano unduly, Baxter thought, and they shouldn't leave Clarissa alone in the cottage. The wind had blown a strand of her flame-colored hair across her cheek. Her long legs were crossed. As the ferry entered the harbor, she stood up and made her way down the deck against the light salt wind, and Baxter, who had returned to the island indifferently, felt that the summer had begun. •
Baxter
knew
•
•
some information about Clarissa He was accepted in Holly Cove because he
that in trying to get
Ryan he had to be careful. had summered there all his life. He could be pleasant and he was a goodlooking man, but his two divorces, his promiscuity, his stinginess, and
John Cheever
complexion had
his Latin
was unsavory.
He
191
with his neighbors a vague feeling that he
left
learned that Clarissa had married
ber and that she was from Chicago.
He
Bob Ryan
Novem-
in
heard people say that she was
That was all he did find out about her. He looked for Clarissa on the tennis courts and the beaches. He didn't see her. He went several times to the beach nearest the Ryans' cottage. She wasn't there. When he had been on the island only a short time, he received from Mrs. Ryan, in the mail, an invitation to tea. It was an invitation that he would not ordinarily have accepted, but he drove eagerly that afternoon over to the Ryans' cottage. He was late. The cars of most of his friends and neighbors were parked in Mrs. Ryan's field. Their voices drifted out of the open windows into the garden, where Mrs. Ryan's climbing roses were in bloom. "Welcome aboard!" and
beautiful
stupid.
when he
Mrs. Ryan shouted
crossed the porch. "This
is
my
farewell
Norway." She led him into a crowded room. Clarissa sat behind the teacups. Against the wall at her back was a cabinet that held the Ryans' geological specimens. Her arms were Baxter watched them while she poured his tea. "Hot? Cold?
party. I'm going to
glass
bare.
.
Lemon?
.
.
Cream?" seemed to be all she had to say, but her red hair and her white arms dominated that end of the room. Baxter ate a sandwich. He hung around the table. "Have you ever been to the island before, Clarissa?" he asked. .
.
.
"Yes."
"Do you swim "It's
the beach at Holly Cove?"
too far away."
"When your drive
at
you there
mother-in-law leaves," Baxter
in the
mornings.
I
go down
said,
"you must
let
me
at eleven."
"Well, thank you." Clarissa lowered her green eyes. She seemed
uncomfortable, and the thought that she might be susceptible crossed Baxter's
mind exuberantly. "Well, thank you," she
a car of
my own and
—
well,
I
don't know,
I
repeated, "but — don't
I
have
"What are you two talking about?" Mrs. Ryan asked, coming between them and smiling wildly in an effort to conceal some of the force of her interference. "I know it isn't geology," she went on, "and I know that it isn't birds, and I know that it can't be books or music, because those are
all
things that Clarissa doesn't like, aren't they, Clarissa?
with me, Baxter," and she led talked to
him about sheep
the party
itself
in the
raising.
was nearly over.
room. Stopping
at
him
to the other side of the
When
Come
room and
the conversation had ended,
Clarissa's chair
was empty. She was not
Ryan and say goodbye, Europe immediately.
the door to thank Mrs.
Baxter said that he hoped she wasn't leaving for
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
192
am," Mrs. Ryan said. "I'm going to the mainland on the boat and sailing from Boston at noon tomorrow."
"Oh, but six-o'clock
I
•
•
•
At half past ten the next morning, Baxter drove up to the Ryans' cottage. Mrs. Talbot, the local woman who helped the Ryans with their housework, answered the door. She said that young Mrs. Ryan was
home, and tiful
let
him
in.
came
Clarissa
downstairs.
than ever, although she seemed put out
at
She looked more beaufinding him there. She
accepted his invitation to go swimming, but she accepted ically.
"Oh,
When
all
it
unenthusiast-
right," she said.
she
came downstairs
again, she
had on a bathrobe over her
broad-brimmed hat. On the drive to Holly Cove, he asked about her plans for the summer. She was noncommittal. She seemed preoccupied and unwilling to talk. They parked the car and walked side by side over the dunes to the beach, where she lay in the sand with her eyes closed. A few of Baxter's friends and neighbors bathing
suit,
and
a
stopped to pass the time, but they didn't stop for long, Baxter noticed. Clarissa's unresponsiveness
He went swimming.
Clarissa
it
difficult to talk.
He
didn't care.
remained on the sand, bundled
in
her
When
he came out of the water, he lay down near her. He watched neighbors and their children. The weather had been fair. The women
wrap. his
made
were tanned. They were
all
married
women
and, unlike Clarissa,
with children, but the rigors of marriage and childbirth had pretty, agile,
left
women
them
all
and contented. While he was admiring them, Clarissa stood
up and took off her bathrobe. Here was something else, and it took his breath away. Some of the inescapable power of her beauty lay in the whiteness of her skin, some of it in the fact that, unlike the other women, who were at ease in bathing suits, Clarissa seemed humiliated and ashamed to find herself wearing so little. She walked down toward the water as if she were naked. When she first felt
the water, she stopped short,
were sporting around the pier
for,
again unlike the others,
like seals, Clarissa didn't like
who
the cold.
Then, caught for a second between nakedness and the cold, Clarissa waded in and swam a few feet. She came out of the water, hastily wrapped herself in the robe, and lay down in the sand. Then she spoke, for the first time that morning for the first time in Baxter's experience with warmth and feeling. "You know, those stones on the point have grown a lot since I was
—
—
here
last,"
she
said.
"What?" Baxter said. "Those stones on the point," Clarissa
said.
"They've grown a
lot."
John Cheever
"Stones don't grow," Baxter
"Oh
193
said.
yes they do," Clarissa said. "Didn't you
know
that? Stones
grow. There's a stone in Mother's rose garden that's grown a foot in the last
few years." "I didn't
know
that stones grew," Baxter said.
"Well, they do," Clarissa said. She yawned; she shut her eyes. She
seemed
to
fall
asleep.
When
she opened her eyes again, she asked Baxter
the time.
"Twelve o'clock," he said. "I have to go home," she said. "I'm expecting guests." Baxter could not contest this. He drove her home. She was unresponsive on the ride, and when he asked her if he could drive her to the beach again, she said no. It was a hot, fair day and most of the doors on the island stood open, but
when
Clarissa said
goodbye
to Baxter, she
closed the door in his face.
Baxter got Clarissa's mail and newspapers from the post office the next day, but that Mrs.
when he
Ryan was
them at the cottage, Mrs. Talbot said He went that week to two large parties that she
called with
busy.
might have attended, but she was not
went
to a
barn dance, and
of the Lake"
— he noticed
late in the
at either.
evening
On
Saturday night, he
— they were dancing "Lady
Clarissa, sitting against the wall.
She was much more beautiful than any other woman there, but her beauty seemed to have intimidated the men. Baxter dropped out of the dance when he could and went to her. She was sitting on a packing case. It was the first thing she complained about. "There isn't even anything to sit on," she said. "Don't you want to dance? Baxter asked. "Oh, I love to dance," she said. "I could dance all night, but I don't think that's dancing." She winced at the music of the fiddle and the She was
a striking wallflower.
"
came with the Hortons. They just told me there was going to dance. They didn't tell me it was going to be this kind of a dance. I
piano. "I
be a
don't like
all
that skipping
and hopping."
"Have your guests left?" Baxter asked. "What guests?" Clarissa said. "You told me you were expecting guests on Tuesday. were
at the
When we
beach."
"I didn't say
they were coming on Tuesday, did
I?" Clarissa asked.
"They're coming tomorrow." "Can't
I
take you
home?" Baxter
asked.
"All right."
He brought
the car around to the barn and turned on the radio.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
194
and slammed the door with spirit. He raced the car over the back roads, and when he brought it up to the Ryans' cottage, he turned off the lights. He watched her hands. She folded them on her purse. "Well, thank you very much," she said. "I was having an awful time and you saved my life. I just don't understand this place, I guess. I've always had plenty of partners, but I sat on that hard box for nearly an hour and nobody even spoke to me. You saved my life."
She got
in
"You're lovely, Clarissa," Baxter
said.
"Well," Clarissa said, and she sighed. "That's just
Nobody knows
my
outward
self.
the real me."
That was it, Baxter thought, and if he could only adjust his flattery to what she believed herself to be, her scruples would dissolve. Did she think of herself as an actress, he wondered, a Channel swimmer, an heiress? The intimations of susceptibility that came from her in the summer night were so powerful, so heady, that they convinced Baxter that here was a woman whose chastity hung by a thread. "I
think
I
know the
real
you," Baxter
said.
"Oh no you don't," Clarissa said. "Nobody does." The radio played some lovelorn music from a Boston calendar,
it
was
still
early in the
summer, but
it
hotel.
seemed, from the
By the
stillness
and the hugeness of the dark trees, to be much later. Baxter put his arms around Clarissa and planted a kiss on her lips. She pushed him away violently and reached for the door. "Oh,
now
you've spoiled everything," she said as she got out of the car.
"Now
know what you've been thinking. I know you've been thinking it all along." She slammed the door and spoke to him across the window. "Well, you needn't come around here any more, Baxter," she said. "My girl friends are coming down from New York tomorrow on the morning plane and I'll be too busy to see you for the rest of the summer. Good night." you've spoiled everything.
I
•
•
•
Baxter was aware that he had only himself to blame; he had
He knew better. He went to bed feeling poorly. He was depressed when he woke, and
moved
too quickly.
angry and sad, and
slept
his depression
was
deepened by the noise of a sea rain, blowing in from the northeast. He lay in bed listening to the rain and the surf. The storm would metamorphose the island. The beaches would be empty. Drawers would stick. Suddenly he got out of bed, went to the telephone, called the airport. The New York plane had been unable to land, they told him, and no more planes were expected that day. The storm seemed to be playing directly into his hands. At noon, he drove in to the village and bought a
John Cheever
195
Sunday paper and a box of candy. The candy was for Clarissa, but he was in no hurry to give it to her. She would have stocked the icebox, put out the towels, and planned the picnic, but now the arrival of her friends had been postponed, and the lively day that she had anticipated had turned out to be rainy and idle. There were ways, of course, for her to overcome her disappointment, but on the evidence of the barn dance he felt that she was lost without her husband or her mother-in-law, and that there were few, if any, people on the island who would pay her a chance call or ask her over for a drink. It was likely that she would spend the day listening to the radio and the rain and that by the end of it she would be ready to welcome anyone, including Baxter. But as long as the forces of loneliness and idleness were working on his side, it was shrewder, Baxter knew, to wait. It would be best to come just before dark, and he waited until then. He drove to the Ryans' with his box of candy. The windows were lighted. Clarissa opened the door. "I wanted to welcome your friends to the island," Baxter said. "They went back visit.
didn't
New
to
"The plane couldn't land. They York. They telephoned me. I had planned such a nice come," Clarissa
Now everything's
said.
changed."
"I'm sorry, Clarissa," Baxter said. "I've brought you a present."
"Oh!" She took the box of candy. "What a beautiful box! What a
What
—
Her face and her voice were, for a minute, ingenuous and yielding, and then he saw the force of resistance transform them. "You shouldn't have done it," she said. lovely present!
"May "Well,
going to
sit
"We "I
come
I
I
in?" Baxter asked.
don't know," she said.
"You
can't
come
in if you're just
around."
could play cards," Baxter
don't
"I'll
"
know how," she
teach you," Baxter
"No," she
said.
said.
said.
"No, Baxter,
derstand the kind of a
said.
woman
I
you'll
am.
I
have to go. You
spent
wrote and told him that you kissed
me
all
just don't
day writing a
un-
letter to
you
Bob.
I
come
She closed the door. From the look on Clarissa's face when he gave her the box of candy,
last night.
I
can't let
in."
Baxter judged that she liked to get presents.
An
inexpensive gold bracelet
bunch of flowers might do it, he knew, but Baxter was an extremely stingy man, and while he saw the usefulness of a present, he could not bring himself to buy one. He decided to wait. or even a
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
ig6
The storm blew
Monday and Tuesday.
on Tuesday night, and by Wednesday afternoon the tennis courts were dry and Baxter played. He played until late. Then, when he had bathed and changed his clothes, he stopped at a cocktail party to pick up a drink. Here one of his neighbors, a married woman with four children, sat down beside him and began a general discussion of the nature of married love. It was a cor\''"rsation, with its glances and innuendoes, that Baxter had been through many times, and he knew roughly what it promised. His neighbor was one of the pretty mothers that Baxter had admired on the beach. Her hair was brown. Her arms were thin and tanned. Her teeth were sound. But while he appeared to be deeply concerned with her opinions on love, the white image of Clarissa loomed up in his mind, and he broke off the conversation and left the party. He drove to the all
It
cleared
Ryans'.
From
a distance the cottage looked shut.
The house and
the garden
were perfectly still. He knocked and then rang. Clarissa spoke to him from an upstairs window.
"Oh, "I've
hello, Baxter," she said.
come
to say goodbye, Clarissa," Baxter said.
He
couldn't think
of anything better.
"Oh, dear," Clarissa
said.
"Well, wait just a minute.
"I'm going away, Clarissa," Baxter said "I've
come
you going?" don't know." He said this
"Well,
This
the
is
be down."
when she opened
the door.
to say goodbye."
"Where "I
I'll
are
come last
in,
sadly.
then," she said hesitantly.
time that
I'll
see you,
I
"Come
guess, isn't
it?
in for a
minute.
Please excuse the
way the place looks. Mr. Talbot got sick on Monday and Mrs. Talbot had to take him to the hospital on the mainland, and I haven't had anybody
He
to help
me.
I've
been
'
all
alone.
down. She was more She talked about the problems that had been pre-
followed her into the living
beautiful than ever.
sented by Mrs. Talbot's departure.
water had died. There was a drain.
She hadn't been able
mouse
room and
The
fire in
sat
the stove that heated the
in the kitchen.
The bathtub wouldn't
to get the car started.
In the quiet house, Baxter heard the sound of a leaky water tap and
pendulum. The sheet of glass that protected the Ryans' geological specimens reflected the fading sky outside the window. The cottage was near the water, and he could hear the surf. He noted these details dispassionately and for what they were worth. When Clarissa finished her remarks about Mrs. Talbot, he waited a full minute before he spoke. a clock
John Cheever
"The sun
is
in
your
hair,
"
"What?" "The sun
is
in
your
hair.
It's
"Well,
isn't as pretty as
it
he
said.
a beautiful color."
used to be," she
it
But I'm not going to dye
gets dark.
197
it.
I
"Hair
said.
don't think that
like
women
mine
should
dye their hair." "You're so intelligent," he murmured.
"You
mean
don't
"Mean what?" "Mean that I'm "Oh, but
intelligent."
do," he said. "You're intelligent. You're beautiful.
I
never forget that night the island.
made
I'd
that?"
I
met you
at
the boat.
I
hadn't wanted to
I'll
come
to
plans to go out West."
must be stupid. Mother Ryan says that I'm stupid, and Bob says that I'm stupid, and even Mrs. Talbot says that I'm stupid, and " She began to cry. She went to a mirror and dried her eyes. Baxter followed. He put his arms around her. "Don't put your arms around me," she said, more in despair than in anger. "Nobody ever takes me seriously until they get their arms around me." She sat down again and Baxter sat near her. "But you're not stupid, Clarissa," he said. "You have a wonderful intelligence, a wonderful mind. I've often thought so. I've often felt that you must have a lot of "I can't
be intelligent," Clarissa said miserably.
"I
—
very interesting opinions."
do have a lot of opinions. Of course, I never dare say them to anyone, and Bob and Mother Ryan don't ever let me speak. They always interrupt me, as if they were ashamed of me. But I do have these opinions. I mean, I think we're like cogs in a wheel. I've concluded that we're like cogs in a wheel. Do you "Well, that's funny," she said, "because
I
think we're like cogs in a wheel?"
"Oh, yes," he "I
"Oh,
yes,
I
do!"
think we're like cogs in a wheel," she said. "For instance, do you
women
think that
opinion
said.
is
that
they have a
lot
I
should work?
I've
don't think married
given that a
women
man. Or do you think "What do you think?" he asked. "I'm what you think." "Well,
your row.
I
my
opinion
is,"
of thought.
should work.
of money, of course, but even then
job to take care of a
lot
that
I
I
think
women
My
mean, unless it's
a full-time
should work?"
terribly interested in
knowing
she said timidly, "that you just have to hoe
don't think that working or joining the church
is
going to
change everything, or special diets, either. I don't put much stock fancy diets. We have a friend who eats a quarter of a pound of meat
in at
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
198
every meal.
He
has scales right on the table and he weighs the meat.
makes the table look awful and I don't see what good it's going I buy what's reasonable. If ham is reasonable, I buy ham. reasonable, I buy lamb. Don't you think that's intelligent?" "I
do him. If lamb is
to
think that's very intelligent."
"And
progressive education," she said. "I don't have a good opinion
of progressive education.
When we
go to the Howards' for dinner, the
children ride their tricycles around the table
way from progressive what's nice and what isn't."
opinion that they get
ought to be told
The sun enough
It
the time, and
schools,
it's
room
my
and that children
had lighted her hair was gone, but there was
that
light in the
this
all
still
for Baxter to see that as she aired her opinions,
her face suffused with color and her pupils dilated. Baxter listened pa-
he knew by then that she merely wanted to be taken for something that she was not that the poor girl was lost. "You're very
tiently, for
—
intelligent," It
was
he
said,
now and
as simple as that.
then. "You're so intelligent."
Oliver Jensen THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS IN EISENHOWERESE
"The Gettysburg Address in Eisenhowerese" was originally circulated in carbon, then mimeograph, before Doris Fleeson printed it in her column. Another version appeared in The New Republic of June 17, 1957. Neither attributed it to Jensen. Dwight MacDonald writes, "The [Oliver Jensen's
version below variations in
added
I
is
the original as given to
which The
New
a turn of the screw."
—
me
by Jensen, with two or three
Republic's version seemed to
me
to
have
ED.]
haven't checked these figures but 87 years ago,
I
think
it
was, a
number
of individuals organized a governmental set-up here in this country, believe
it
covered certain Eastern areas, with
this idea
I
they were follow-
up based on a sort of national independence arrangement and the program that every individual is just as good as every other individual. Well, now, of course, we are dealing with this big difference of opinion, civil disturbance you might say, although I don't like to appear to take sides or name any individuals, and the point is naturally to check up, by actual experience in the field, to see whether any governmental set-up with a basis like the one I was mentioning has any validity and find out whether that dedication by those early individuals will pay off in lasting values and things of that kind. Well, here we are, at the scene where one of these disturbances between different sides got going. We want to pay our tribute to those loved ones, those departed individuals who made the supreme sacrifice here on the basis of their opinions about how this thing ought to be handled. And I would say this. It is absolutely in order to do this. But if you look at the over-all picture of this, we can't pay any tribute we can't sanctify this area, you might say we can't hallow ing
—
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
200
according to whatever individual creeds or faiths or sort of religious outlooks are involved like
I
said
about
this particular area. It
was those
men, very brave individuals, who have given this religious character to the area. The way I see it, the rest of the world will not remember any statements issued here individuals themselves, including the enlisted
but
it
will
and carried
Now
how these men down the fairway.
put their shoulders to the wheel
never forget this idea
frankly,
our
job, the living individuals' job here,
the burden and sink the putt they
made
is
to pick
these big efforts here
up
for. It is
—
our job to get on with the assignment and from these deceased fine individuals to take extra inspiration, you could call it, for the same theories
about the set-up for which they made such a big contribution.
have
to
make up our minds
didn't put out just
God
make
all
a dry
right here
and now,
that blood, perspiration
run here, and that
all
and
as
see
it,
that they
— well — that they
of us here, under God, that
didn't is,
the
of our choice, shall beef up this idea about freedom and liberty and
those kind of arrangements, and that government of all
I
We
individuals
picture.
and
all
individuals, by
for the individuals, shall not pass out of the world-
Saul Bellow EXCERPT FROM
TO JERUSALEM AND BACK
Security measures are
men
strict
on
the bags are searched,
flights to Israel,
and the women have an electronic hoop passed over them, fore and aft. Then hand luggage is opened. No one is very patient. Visibility in the queue is poor because of the many Hasidim with their broad hats and beards and sidelocks and dangling fringes who have descended on Heathrow and are far too restless to wait in line but rush in and out, gesticulating, exclaiming. The corridors are jumping with them. Some two hundred Hasidim are flying to Israel to attend the circumcision of the firstborn son of their spiritual leader, the Belzer Rabbi. Entering the 747, my wife, Alexandra, and I are enfiladed by eyes that lie dark in hairy ambush. To me there is nothing foreign in these hats, sidelocks, and fringes. It is my childhood revisited. At the age of six, I myself wore a tallith katan, or scapular, under my shirt, only mine was a the
are frisked,
scrap of green calico print, whereas theirs are white linen.
God
in-
Moses to speak to the children of Israel and to "bid them that they make them fringes in the borders of their garments." So they are still wearing them some four thousand years later. We find our seats, two in a row of three, toward the rear of the aircraft. The third is occupied by a young Hasid, highly excited, who is staring at me. "Do you speak Yiddish?" he says. structed
"Yes, certainly." "I
he
cannot be next to your
wife. Please
sit
between
us.
Be
so good,"
says.
"Of course." I
Curious, rather. is
am not really put out. Our Hasid is in his late twenties. He is pimply, his neck eyes goggle, his underlip extrudes. He does not keep a
take the middle seat,
thin, his blue
which
I
dislike,
but
I
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
202
—
Thoughts and impulses other than civilized fill it by no means inferior impulses and thoughts. And though he is not permitted to sit beside women unrelated to him or to look at them or to communicate with them in any manner (all of which probably saves him a great deal of trouble), he seems a good-hearted young man and he is visibly enjoying himself. All the Hasidim are vividly enjoying themselves, dodgcivilized face.
ing through the aisles, visiting chattering standing impatiently in the long lavatory lines, amiable, busy as geese.
They pay no
attention to signs.
Don't they understand English? The stewardesses are furious with them.
one of the hostesses when I may expect to receive a drink and she cries out in irritation, "Back to your seat!" She says this in so ringing a voice that I retreat. Not so the merry-minded Hasidim, exulting everywhere. The orders given by these young gentile uniformed females are I
ask
nothing to them. all
To them
they are merely attendants, exotic bediener,
but bodyless. Anticipating a difficulty,
lunch.
do
"I can't
weren't prepared."
we
that,
Her
risen with indignation.
I
ask the stewardess to serve
me
a kosher
haven't enough for them," she says.
big British eyes are affronted
"We've got
to go out of
"We
and her bosom has
our way to
Rome
for
more
of their special meals."
my wife asks why I ordered the kosher lunch. "Because bring my chicken dinner this kid with the beard will be in a
Amused,
when
they
state,"
I
explain.
And
so he
is.
The
British Airways chicken with the chill of death
upon it lies before me. But after three hours of security exercises at Heathrow I am hungry. The young Hasid recoils when the tray is handed to me. He addresses me again in Yiddish. He says, "I must talk to you.
You
won't be offended?"
"No,
I
don't think so."
"You may want
"Why
should
to give
me
a slap in the face."
I?"
"You are a Jew. You must be can you eat that!" "It looks awful,
doesn't
"You mustn't touch wiches for me.
it.
a Jew,
we
are speaking Yiddish.
How
it?"
My
womenfolk packed kosher-beef sand-
your wife Jewish?" Here I'm obliged to lie. Alexandra Is
him too many shocks
at
once, and
upbringing."
"She doesn't speak Yiddish?"
I
is
say,
Rumanian. But I can't give "She has not had a Jewish
Saul Bellow
"Not
But excuse me,
a word.
my
you eat some of "With pleasure." "Then I will give you "Will
must never
want
I
203
my
lunch."
kosher food instead, as a favor?"
a sandwich, but only
on one condition. You
— never— eat trephena food again."
"I can't
promise you
And
You're asking too much.
that.
just for
one
sandwich." "I
have a duty toward you," he
tells
me. "Will you
listen to a
prop-
osition?"
"Of course "So
I
make
us
let
will."
a deal.
I
am
nothing but kosher food, for the
you will eat send you fifteen
prepared to pay you. of your
rest
life I will
If
dollars a week."
"That's very generous,"
I
say.
"Well, you are a Jew," he says. "I must try to save you."
"How do you
earn your living?"
New
"In a Hasidic sweater factory in there. in
The
boss
is
a Hasid.
New Jersey. My "How
rabbi
is
I
came from
Jersey.
We
Israel five years
are
all
Hasidim
ago to be married
in Jerusalem."
you don't know English?" need English for? So, I am
that
is it
"What do
I
asking, will
you take
my
fifteen dollars?"
"Kosher food teen dollars "I
isn't
can go
"I can't
is
far
more expensive than other
I
say. "Fif-
nearly enough."
as far as twenty-five."
accept such a sacrifice from you."
Shrugging, he gives up and
and eat
kinds,"
guiltily,
my
I
turn to the twice disagreeable chicken
appetite spoiled.
book. "He's so fervent," says
my wife.
The young Hasid opens "I
wonder
if
his prayer
he's praying for you."
She smiles at my discomfiture. As soon as the trays are removed, the Hasidim block the aisles with their Minchah service, rocking themselves and stretching their necks upward. The bond of common prayer is very strong. This is what has held the Jews together for thousands of years.
"I like
them," says
my
wife. "They're so lively, so childlike."
"You might
find
them
a
little
hard to
live
with,"
I
tell
have to do everything their way, no options given." "But they're cheerful, and they're warm and natural. costumes. Couldn't you get one of those beautiful hats?" "I don't
know whether they
sell
them
to outsiders."
her.
I
"You'd
love their
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
204
wife,
When the Hasid returns to his seat after prayer, I tell him that my a woman of learning, will be lecturing at the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem.
"What is she?" "A mathematician." He is puzzled. "What I
is
that?"
he
asks.
try to explain.
He says, "This I never heard of. What actually is it they do?" I am astonished. I knew that he was an innocent but I would
never
have believed him to be ignorant of such a thing. "So you don't know what mathematicians are. Do you know what a physicist is? Do you recognize the
"Never.
This
is
name
Who
too
of Einstein?"
is
he?"
much
for
me.
Silent,
I
give his case
some thought. Busy-
minded people, with their head-culture that touches all surfaces, have heard of Einstein. But do they know what they have heard? A majority do not. These Hasidim choose not to know. By and by I open a paperback and try to lose myself in mere politics. A dozen Hasidim in the lavatory queue stare down at us. We land and spill out and go our separate ways. At the baggage carousel
I
see
my
youthful Hasid again and
me
we take a final look at each modern age can produce in
he sees what deformities the the seed of Abraham. In him I see a piece of other. In
rather as
if
an antiquity.
It is
Puritans in seventeenth-century dress and observing seven-
teenth-century customs were to be found
still
outh. Israel, which receives us impartially, arrivals.
history,
But then
Israel
is
something
living in is
else again.
Boston or Plym-
accustomed
to strange
Jessica Mitford
EMIGRATION EXCERPT FROM
Politics aside,
Daughters and Rebels
two other elements had entered our
lives
which
effectively
tipped the scales in favour of emigration: the Process Server and
my
hundred pounds. the
The Process Server was a pale, sad-looking youth in the employ of London Electricity Board. Fortunately for us, he was not particularly
— —
good at his line of work; the most transparent disguises Esmond's false moustache, top hat or worker's cap, my dark glasses would effectively muddle him for the few moments needed to escape. He would stare sorrowfully after us, his brow wrinkled with puzzlement, as we quickly dashed round a corner or disappeared from his view down the Underground.
about the Process Server, because in a way
had been unfairly trapped into responsibility for his haunting presence. No one had ever explained to me that you had to pay for electricity; and lights, electric heaters, stoves blazed away night and day at Rotherhithe Street. When the enormous bill first arrived, we thought briefly of contesting it an element, in court on the grounds that electricity is an Act of God like fire, earth and air; but legal friends assured us this would get us nowhere. It was unthinkable that we should pay, so we moved out of the Rotherhithe Street house to a furnished room near the Marble Arch. Somehow, the Process Server found out where we were staying. Every morning before going to work we peered cautiously out of the window to see if he was coming down the street or lurking at a corner. We regretfully abandoned the disguises because he had seen them all so many times. If he was in sight, we would go back to bed, as Esmond had a theory that it was illegal and in some way a violation of Magna Carta to serve process on people in bed. Sometimes we stayed in bed for as long as two days, fearing that our tormentor was still in the neighbourI
felt guilty
—
I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
206
hood.
Though
enjoyable to us, these lost days were becoming a source
of irritation to Esmond's boss.
Obviously,
my
a trust fund of
in
more ways
came into a great windone hundred pounds, and we were casting around
than one. Besides, on fall,
England had become untenable,
in
life
twenty-first birthday
way to use it. mother had established
I
for a suitable
My
savings accounts for
all
of us. With the
making weekly deposits of sixpence into these accounts, which, together with interest, would reach the sum of a hundred pounds by the time we were twenty-one. Only by luck was my hundred pounds intact, for many years before my older sisters had inadvertently lost a good portion of their savings when they sank some money in one of my father's many "damn' sound investments." Debo and I had escaped, being considered too young to sign up for the venbirth of
each
child, she
had
started
ture.
An American by Reno" approached project.
the romantic and Western-sounding
my
of "Mr.
father in the early twenties about this particular
Mr. Reno had invented a
plans and blueprints;
name
when
built,
which he produced the Reno tank would be able to descend sort of tank, for
ocean and bring to the surface the golden treasures of the days of piracy and the Spanish Armada. "Think of it great chests of gold bullion!" my father would say, rubbing his hands. He made an enormous investment of his own, and raised additional money from into the depths of the
—
uncles and friends
The
who were
five oldest
anxious to share in the pirate gold.
Mitford children were allowed to put up twenty
pounds each of the savings
my mother was keeping for them. I remember
shedding hot tears of rage as they described the enormous fortunes they
would soon own priceless
— not
to speak of fabulous jewellery,
gems, that would doubtless be dredged up
heavy gold chains,
in
Mr. Reno's tank.
But my mother was adamant: Debo and I were under seven, and too young to make our own financial decisions. Debo and I had our day of rejoicing soon afterwards, when it was
Reno had taken off for America without leaving a trace. "Really very dishonest of him I can't imagine what he must have been thinking of," Muv said. The other sisters put up a half-hearted argument that Debo and I should be forced to share in the loss, since we would readily have invested our money too if we had been allowed to. But for
learned that Mr.
—
once
and our savings were kept intact. The sum of a hundred pounds seemed just the right amount for the purpose of emigration. It was neither large enough to start a business or invest for income, nor small enough to spend on a few parties and justice prevailed,
Jessica Mitford
207
good meals out. Yet a third of it would purchase two one-way steerage tickets to America, leaving a nice round sum, over $300, at the prevailing rate of exchange, to live on for a while until we found work. To our disappointment, the American Consul to whom we now applied for the necessary papers did not look at matters this
Indeed, he expressed great surprise that
new life become
we should
way
at
all.
consider starting a
with so small a capital, mentioned there was danger
we might
and told us that we should have to show a support amounting to at least fifteen dollars a week
a public charge,
guarantee of financial
before he would consider giving us immigration visas.
We canvassed various
friends
— Philip Toynbee, Peter Nevile, Giles
— and suggested they should underwrite in case
we should become
a guarantee of financial support
penniless, but
we were met on
all
sides with
you the papers all right; just say the Magic Words," Peter advised. The Magic Words, it seemed, were Land of Opportunity, Rugged Individualism, Free Enterprise. With Peter's help, Esmond concocted and memorized a brief appeal in which the ritual words were repeated a number of times, and we presented ourselves once more to the Consul. No sooner were we in his office than Esmond became transformed into his idea of red-blooded Americanism. "Sir," he began, "my wife and I hold dear a most heartfelt, deep and sincere faith in the ability of your grea-a-at country, the Land of Opportunity, the United States of America, to provide, through its Free Enterprise system, a modest but adequate living for those young people who, like ourselves, are imbued with the spirit of Rugged Individualism." He went on in this way for some time, Sincerity and Forthrightness actually firm and indignant refusals. "He'll give
shining in his eyes. If
Esmond had suddenly assumed
the appearance of a cross be-
Dobson and Spencer Tracy, the Consul didn't seem to notice. As Peter had predicted, the words had an enormous, almost mesmeric, effect on him. With a faraway look in his eyes which were no doubt seeing the windswept main street of some Midwestern town, swarming with rugged individualists he uttered the words of consent: "Well, I guess I'll take a chance on you kids." Now that the trip was becoming a reality, Esmond hit upon an idea which would enable us to travel all over America and get paid for it. We would get some of our friends to come too and offer a lecture covering various phases of English life. Our idea of America, like that of most English people, was limited and not a little distorted. We pictured it as a vast nation of Babbitts whose eyes were uniformly riveted on English royalty. Mothers and Dads, and Sex. tween Mr. Oover
—
in Zuleika
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
2o8
"Women's clubs are the very thing!" Esmond explained. "They have them all over America, and this'll be just the sort of thing they love. They'll simply eat up Philip Toynbee." I remarked that this was a most unappetizing thought, but
Esmond
an American turn of phrase he had In short order,
the
we
lined
just
up three
me
he was merely repeating picked up from Peter.
assured
co-lecturers. Sheila Legge,
ex-chorus-girl-market-researchers,
agreed
readily,
one of
and Esmond
promptly assigned a subject for her lecture: "Men, from the Ritz to the Fish and Chips Stand."
who had
The young male
secretary of a well-known poet,
from his employer in one of those petulant flare-ups which often mar such relationships, was easily persuaded to prepare to just parted
be eaten up by the women's clubs;
"From Guardsman at
to Poet's Secretary." Philip
Oxford University," and "Arnold Toynbee
titled:
his rather suggestive topic
was
to speak
was
be
on "Sex
Life
Day
talk
in addition to offer a special Father's
— Historian,
to
but First and Foremost 'Dad.'"
I
was to describe "The Inner Life of an English Debutante" (Esmond thought they would like to hear about the delicious dinners and suppers we used to have during the season). Esmond himself would be manager of the expedition, occasionally helping out with lectures on such surefire
subjects as "Is Princess Elizabeth Really the
"The Truth about Winston Churchill," "How
to
Monster of Glamis?",
Meet the King,"
"Sedi-
tion Spreading at Eton."
In the atmosphere of almost electric excitement which
Esmond
managed to create when developing a new plan, the five of us met to draw up a prospectus suitable for mailing out to lecture agencies. It began in typical Esmond style: "Dear Sirs: King George and Queen Elizalways
abeth are not the only people leaving these shores for America
We are also coming." We even got as far
as
having a special
series of
this year.
photographs made
There was a leering Philip to accompany "Sex Life at Oxford University," and a filial Philip for the Dad's Day lecture. Sheila, showing a large expanse of the limb from which, we assumed, she had got her surname, was pictured in a sultry pose near the main entrance of the Ritz, with the poet's ex-secretary lounging languorously near by, symbolically clutching a slim volume and a Guardsman's cap. But no sooner had we assembled all this promising material than our fellow lecturers began to drop out one by one. A sudden turn in Philip's love life required his presence in England; the poet's secretary made up with the poet, and resumed his post; Sheila was unable to raise the money for her ticket. Our frantic efforts to shore up the situation were to no avail. We regretfully decided that our plans would have to be revised and the lecture tour junked. for enclosure with the lecture outlines.
Jessica Mitford
Now we
concentrated on getting
209
letters
of introduction from any-
one and everyone we knew who had ever been to America or who knew any Americans. They were addressed to as wide and varied an assortment of people as those from whom we had secured them: artists in Greenwich Village; tycoons on Wall Street; movie people, poets, kind old ladies, journalists, advertising people.
My own
impressions of Americans had been culled from various
sources, ranging from books read in childhood, such as Little
Women
and What Katy Did, to Hemingway and the movies. I knew that they lived on strange and rather unappetizing-sounding foods called squash, grits, hot dogs and corn pudding. On the other hand, cookies sounded rather delicious. I visualized them as little cakes made in the shape of cooks with sugar-icing aprons and hats. I
gathered that Americans often
bullets
whizzed through the
made
seeing The Petrified Forest,
love under tables while gangster
air.
Peter Nevile was the only person to America;
From
and Esmond, with
we knew who had
his usual
actually
been
thoroughness in such matters,
on the language, manners and customs the Land of Opportunity. We spent an evening
enlisted Peter's help in briefing us
we should encounter
in
house being initiated. "Never say, 'I say!' Say, 'Say,' " Peter explained patiently. 'Things on the whole move much faster in America; people don't stand for elecat his
tion, they gitating;
it
run for
office. If a
means
left-luggage place;
ill. it's
person says he's
Mad means called a
pub, not roast meat. ..."
He
sick,
it
doesn't
mean
regur-
angry, not insane. Don't ask for the
A
checkroom.
means a good of Christian names we
nice joint
listed a variety
should encounter, some taken from English titles, such as Earl and Duke, some from American states, such as Washington, Georgia, Flor-
"On the other hand," he went on, lapsing into his American accent as he warmed to his theme, "you'll hardly find anyone christened Viscount or New York. There's really no special logic to it." He instructed ida.
us in the use of "gotten" and "you betcha" (under no circumstances to
be pronounced "you bet you"), and
filled
us
up with
misinformation: that "pediatrician" was a fancy ist,
and "mortician"
a
a certain
name
musician with necrophilic bent
for a
who
amount of
corn special-
played only at
funerals. "
'Twenty'
is
pronounced 'Twenny,'
sure to leave out the
first
't'
"
Peter continued, "and be
in 'interesting,' too.
Then
you'll
have
to
know
a few stock rejoinders. For example, you'll find people generally say,
'I'll
be seeing you' instead of 'goodbye.' Then that leaves the field wide open for you to answer, 'Not if I see you first,' which will show you are on your toes, alert and amusing. Alternatively, you may be able to raise a
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
210
laugh by saying, 'Abyssinia.' Another thing,
if
phment: 'You're looking well,' 'What a pretty are supposed to say, 'Thank you,' instead of
You have
to
for instance,
be on the lookout for what an American
may
is
someone pays you dress,' just
a
and so forth
mumbling
comyou
—
inaudibly.
considered a compliment, too;
say, 'That dress
is
the cat's pyjamas.'
meant as just the opposite." When I suggested, in what I imagined was best American idiom, that I guessed it was time for us to scram home, Peter's parting advice was: "You'll need a crooked lawyer in New York; can't get on without one. Why don't you wire the British Consul there and tell him to have one meet you at the boat?" Don't take
this as a criticism,
it's
Kingsley
Amis
ANOTHER GODDAM ENGLISHMAN EXCERPT FROM One Fat Englishman
[Roger Micheldene, an English publisher on a scouting
trip to
America,
has been invited to spend a weekend at Budweiser College. His hosts, at a
swimming pool party, are Joe and Grace Derlanger. Among the guests are young Irving Macher, a would-be novelist in his junior year at Budweiser, and his girlfriend, Suzanne Klein; another Englishman, Nigel Pargeter; and the Bangs. Dr. Ernst Bang, an authority on Early Icelandic and Faroese, a professor at the University of Copenhagen, is currently a Visiting Fellow at Budweiser. Though the others are unaware of it. Dr. Bang's beautiful wife, Helene, is one of Roger's former mistresses. Roger has come out for Ed.] the weekend only so that he might meet Helene again.
among the easiest of his life. For bed with women, keeping hidden the
Roger's decision not to swim had been
man
he on getting into full enormity of his fatness was a chronic problem. Its most acute form naturally came up when someone new had to be hustled or cajoled past the point of no return. That point tended to get later and later as his belly waxed. The merest glimpse of it might be enough, even at a very a
as
advanced
keen
as
stage, to
remind
a girl of her obligations to family tradition, to
husband or boy friend or host or roommate or landlady, to humanity. But not only that. Recent experience suggested that that belly, exposed in a moment of inattention or abandon, could cause total withdrawal of favors previously granted. In other words,
it
tended to stop them. Cold.
At any time. This must not be allowed to happen with Helene.
shame
that,
It
was a crying
temperamentally, she was different from his usual sort of
girl.
His usual sort of
with
them and
this
girl
tended not to take
could lead to a
lot
it
personally
when he
slept
of rather loose behavior. Helene,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
212
on the other hand, was always very strict. In particular, she insisted on something like parity of nudity. She would not put on anything like a show for him while he sat about in faulUess West of England tweeds. In the intervals of choking with rage and lust over this policy of hers, Roger
saw
it
as not unreasonable.
meant that the really detailed inspecmake would have to be paid for by giving
But
it
which he longed to her the chance of making a roughly equally really detailed inspection of him if she were so minded. So no go. So he had had to make do with a
tion of her
couple of glimpses of the side of her as she skipped out of or into bed, the back of her as she dressed or undressed, a small part of the top of the front of her before she switched out the light.
So seeing her in a bathing suit, he told himself without fear of contradiction, was going to be significant. He would be gaining visual experience of her body,
if
not neat, then in a higher concentration than
chance of getting used to. He hoped it would not be too strong for him. With a slight smile of complacency at his own forethought, he reached into his jacket pocket for his sunglasses and put them on. Provided he could remember to move his head about slightly from time to time, nobody would now be able to tell where he was looking. Any involuntary bulging of the eyeballs would likewise be masked. It occurred to him, as he watched carefully for Helene's reappearance, that he might throw away these advantages if he went on he had had
behaving
a
carved out of old red sandstone.
like a seated figure
in his chair,
mopped
his face, took a
pinch of snuff, attacked
He
shifted
his drink,
glanced about.
Only Grace Derlanger and, more surprisingly, Irving Macher had failed to go and change. They stood talking a few yards off. Or rather Macher was talking. He was doing it in a deep and rather resonant voice which Roger considered he had no right to. Any more than he had a right to a two- or two-and-a-half-thousand-dollar advance.
"And you're if
in self-defense.
that other stuff
Whoever did
justified in
"More than
acquiring money," that,
it's
now, that junk about
that duty?
And
Macher was
saying, as
your duty. We've gotten over
it's
all
your duty not to have money.
duty's a thing people do, not
don't do. Listen, what would you do to a soldier
something they
who went
into a battle
without taking his gun along? You'd have him court-martialled, wouldn't
you?
And
you'd be
right.
Somebody who
can't protect himself
other people's power of self-protection. Armies understand lot
more.
An
army's the right kind of organization because
weakens
this. it
And
a
only exists
do what's necessary. Nothing stuck on afterwards for the look of the thing. It's a pity nobody can use them any more, armies. All we have
to
Kingsley Amis
213
and they're no good. No good in the way I'm looking for. Too much aesthetics about the whole idea. "But going back to money: it's a terrific liberation to think of it in the right way. My parents have money and I like and admire them for it. It used to bother me a little, knowing so much of it was around and hearing about it all the time, but not any more. Money's good." Roger got the last part of this at close range, for Grace Derlanger, seeing him sitting on his own, had walked her companion over. She settled her stocky body efficiently in a near-by chair, gazing at Macher through her thick glasses but not moving a muscle of her face. It was hard to tell whether or not she thought she was having nonsense talked to her. Roger guessed she did, though without feeling as much conviction as he would have liked. To be sure about nonsense he had to be
now
is
scientists,
able to classify
humanitarian
assign
it,
it
to a family tree of liberal nonsense,
humanist-
academic nonsense, Protestant nonsense, Freudian nonsense, and so on. Macher's nonsense stopped before he could get deep enough into it. nonsense,
Willingly turning his head, Roger saw that the Bangs were ap-
proaching. Ernst had his arm round Helene's shoulders, partly screening
her from view, though not enough to conceal the fact that her bathing
two widely separated pieces. With much loud chatter, Joe and Pargeter, the Englishman, joined them by the diving-board, closely folsuit
was
in
lowed by Macher's
Helene was only
The group was
girl.
visible for
in
continuous movement, so that
unpredictable instants. Roger sat watching
sniper waiting for a clear shot at a general.
like a
me
you another drink, he said after a good deal of this, and without waiting for an answer got up and strode off to the drinks cupboard. He was quite near Helene when, with perfect coordination, she turned towards the pool to say something to Macher's girl. This move presented her back to Roger and her front to where he had just been sitting. When he got back there with the drinks she had turned away "Let
get
"
again.
"Come
on, you lot," he called with a suddenness and an unlooked-
for joviality that
brought both Grace and Macher round
"What about some
action?
Or
are
you
all
in their seats.
afraid of the water?
Show
us
what you can do, eh?" "We're not standing for see
how wrong he
is.
"
that, are
He moved
we, Nigel?" Joe roared. "Let him
along the diving-board, bony in a
minimal pair of light green trunks. The group behind him began
to break
up.
"You're British, aren't you, Mr. Dean?" Macher asked loudly.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
214 "I
am. And the name
"I'm sorn'.
"No no
I
"I fail to see It's
it,
does
it?
Like Mitchell-Dean?"
one word. Why, anyway?" wouldn't know why, would I, Mr. Micheldene?"
it's
"Well now,
"What?
Micheldene."
has a hvphen in
It
no,
is
who
else
would."
your name,
isn't it?"
"What about it?" "So you'd know why it's one word and I wouldn't." "I don't know what you're talking about." "Look, you asked me why your name was one word." "I did
nothing of the kind.
I
asked you
why you wanted
to
know
if
"
I
were
British.
"Oh, that was what you asked me." Macher laughed quietly for a time while Roger watched him. "I beg your pardon. Well, the answer to that should be obvious enough." "Should It?" "Yes. I wanted
to
know."
"Just that?" "Just that."
"Thank you." 'Tou're welcome."
Roger had been suffering several kinds of pain during this exchange. One was physical, the result of forcing his eyeballs as far round to one side as they would go in hast>' attempts to get a look at Helene. More severe was the emotional pain of not having got a look. Macher had kept distracting his attention. By the time he had finished with him all five of the bathing parts- were in the pool. A third kind of pain got going in Roger. Retrospective in nature, it came from not having reached out a foot and tipped Macher, chair and all, into the water as soon as he
opened
his horrible
The think
it
mouth.
pool was not a long one, but
was
sufficiently long for Joe to
way from one end of it to the other made him snort a lot. It also disturbed the
worth while ploughing
again and again. Doing this
it
his
water enough to turn most of Helene, in the intervals
when
she was not
swimming, into a disintegrated mess of oscillating patches of color. There was the refraction too. Ernst started to do some diving. He seemed good at it, good enough at any rate to make Helene stop swimming and watch him. Roger had a full close view of the back of her head and shoulders. The water had altered the colors of her hair, deepening the yellows, making the light parts almost transparent and introducing bronze tints near the crown. herself
Kingsley
Amis
She and the others laughed and shouted
215
one another
to
in a relaxed,
convivial way.
"Aren't they a lovely couple?" Grace asked Roger.
He gave her a suspicious glance. For a middle-aged American woman she had not often struck him as very unamiable, even though he had never contemplated bothering to find out what took place in her head. But he had caught her eye late in the Macher monologue and found her watching him interestedly, her nostrils dilated in a way that meant she was suppressing something. A yawn, he hoped. He said now in a
puzzled tone: "Who?"
"Why, Dr. and Mrs. Bang, of course. Don't you think
"Oh
yes. Yes,
so?"
do. Quite charming."
I
"They seem completely made
for
each other."
"Yes."
he ever decides he's done enough philosophy or whatever it is, I should imagine there must be a part waiting for him in some Tarzan movie or other. He's so graceful. Look at him go now. With those looks he might so easily be effeminate, but there's nothing like that about him "If
at
all.
And
isn't
she just ravishing?"
"Oh, delightful." "So typically Scandinavian
am
surprised
"What
some
And
in her coloring.
that figure.
I
really
television fellow.
With
fellow hasn't gotten hold of her."
sort of fellow?"
"Well, you know,
some
sort of
movie or
those looks she wouldn't need to be able to sing or anything, or even act."
"No, she wouldn't, would she?" "But you know what the
Roger gazed
loveliest part of all is."
her in unexpectant silence.
at
moment you lay eyes on them the first time well, I did. Completely devoted. He doesn't really care to look at anybody else, and it's the same with her. Or even "They're so utterly devoted.
You can
see
it
the
—
more
so,
wouldn't you say?"
Roger would not
"And
say.
that's so rare these days, isn't it?
and breaking up and divorcing and all the how terribly tactless of me. I didn't mean
—
"That's perfectly "I
do
feel
— so
"Say no more.
'
all
Or
right,
— with .
.
.
all this
Oh, I'm
running off
sorry, Roger,
Grace."
else stand
by
for a dose of grievous bodily
harm
(Roger thought to himself), you women's-cultural-lunch-club-organizing
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
2l6
Saturday Review of Literature-reading substantial-inheritance-from-softdrink-corporation-awaiting old-New-Hampshire-family-invoking Ken-
Yank
nedy-loving just-wunnerful-labelling
bag.
Grace dropped her voice to say in a carefully casual tone: "Did you hear anything from Marigold recently?" "Not for some years." Roger was aware of Macher listening to all this, and listening with something less than full attention too. That made it worse. If the Yid scribbler was going to go on sitting there with his lobeless ears flapping, Roger reasoned, the least he could do was flap them with passionate absorption. "Marigold was my first wife," he went on very loudly. "My present wife, if you can call her that, is named Pamela."
"Oh, Roger,
I
"Sweetheart,
don't it
know what
to say,
I
seem
doesn't matter in the least."
production smile to ram
home
his
to
have
He
—
gave her a
full-
moral advantage. The grade-one
going-over Grace had just earned would have to wait until he was unen-
cumbered by the presence of Hebrew jackanapeses and such. letter from Pamela just before I came over, actually."
"How
is
"I
had a
she?"
"She seems very
Most of the
had been devoted to asking him to see if he could find and bring back to England the unique typescript of a novel called Perne in a Gyre by his talentless nuclear-disarmer brother-in-law. It was thought to be lying about somewhere in the offices of a New York literary agent, Strode Atkins by name, who was supposed to have been attending this evening's gathering but had not, thank God, so far appeared.
"Any
real
well."
single
page of the
letter
news?"
"No." Ernst had climbed out of the pool and stood pressing the water
from
his hair.
Helene, her back
still
turned to Roger, was also emerging.
Grace said she must see about towels and went away. Roger watched Helene while she chatted to her husband and to Macher's girl, accepted a towel from Grace and moved round the pool to within a few yards of him, the towel hiding most of her between the neck and the knees. Her eyes were slightly bleared with the water. After a moment she sat down, going so far as to present Roger with a three-quarter rear view. Even though the towel was round her shoulders and she was clasping her knees, her shape was such that he got something. Not enough, of course. He was just rehearsing mentally the casualness with which he would get up and walk over and ask her how she had enjoyed her swim
when Macher
said:
"Some
girl,
that."
Kingsley Amis
217
Roger went through the motions of noticing he was not
"Girl?"
"What girl?" "Not Suzanne
alone.
The
other
Helene. That
"Oh
The
girl.
girl."
yes,
I
I
He
girl
brought.
I
The Dane. The
blonde.
think
"Good. Some "Yes,
Klein, the
You
haven't noticed her.
professor's wife. Mrs. Bang.
pointed.
I
see
which one you're
girl, isn't
referring to."
she?"
suppose you could say that."
"I'm glad you agree. What's she like?"
"How do you mean?" "Oh, you don't know how I mean." Macher did his laugh. "Well now, let's just sit around for a while and get together and have a little think and try to figure out how I mean. I can't mean what's she like to look at, because I can see that for myself. As a matter of fact it was seeing what she's like to look at that led me to comment that she's some girl. Anyway, since we've decided I can't mean what's she like to look at I must mean something else, like is she nice or nasty, smart or stupid, educated or illiterate, drunken or of temperate disposition and habits all this
this
type of
stuff.
That's
how I mean."
Roger heard him out with unwavering gaze, his invariable policy in situation unless a really murderous verbal interruption could be
devised or physical violence resorted
to.
After prolonging his gaze for
half a minute or so without speaking or moving, he said: "I see. But quite
apart from whether
these matters,
I
I
feel
"Oh misjudged
ought
to consider giving
this or
you
to take
my
opinion on
life in
general was
you
should have thought your approach to
far too idiosyncratic for
thought about
I
an interest in what
I
or
anyone
else
anything else."
no, Mr. Micheldene, that would be arrogant of me. You've
me most
terribly,
I'm afraid.
Of course
I'm interested in what
you think about Mrs. Bang. After all, you've known her much longer than I've had a chance to, haven't you? And you're an older man, so your judgment would be more mature and balanced than mine." "How true that is," Roger said. "However, allow me to suggest that we defer our discussion of Mrs. Bang until such time as you've acquired
some
basis of
comparison. Until then
He was on
his feet to
at the very earliest."
go over and look
at Helene's front
when Grace
name. He turned with some effort and saw her approaching across the grass with a man and a woman about his own age: Strode Atkins and his wife, no doubt. Both were of well-groomed and yet battered appearance. They clearly expected to be introduced to him. Roger was perplexed to find no red mist of rage clouding his vision. He and called his
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
2l8
Mrs. Atkins, a thin
woman
with large eyes and straight brown hair done
each other a moment longer than was necessary. Then her husband was shaking his hand and shouting: "An Englishman. Another goddam Englishman. I like that. I do like that. I'm a horrible in a fringe,
looked
at
Anglophile, you know.
And
around these days, brother."
believe
me
there aren't too
many
of
them
Kurt Vonnegut,
Jr.
REPORT ON THE BARNHOUSE EFFECT
Let
me begin by saying that I don't know any more about where Professor
Arthur Barnhouse
is
enigmatic message
hiding than anyone else does. Save for one short,
left in
my
mailbox on Christmas Eve,
I
have not
heard from him since his disappearance a year and a half ago.
be disappointed if they expect to learn how they can bring about the so-called "Barnhouse Effect." If I were able and willing to give away that secret, I would certainly What's more, readers of
this article will
be something more important than a psychology instructor. I have been urged to write this report because I did research under the professor's direction and because ishing discovery. But while
I
was
I
was the
his student
I
first
to learn of his aston-
was never entrusted with
knowledge of how the mental forces could be released and directed. He was unwilling to trust anyone with that information. I would like to point out that the term "Barnhouse Effect" is a creation of the popular press, and was never used by Professor Barn-
house.
The name he chose
for the
phenomenon was "dynamopsychism"
or force of the mind.
cannot believe that there is a civilized person yet to be convinced that such a force exists, what with its destructive effects on display in every national capital. I think humanity has always had an inkling that this sort of force does exist. It has been common knowledge that some I
people are luckier than others with inanimate objects Professor Barnhouse did was to
show
like dice.
What
that such "luck" was a measurable
which in his case could be enormous. By my calculations, the professor was about
force,
powerful than a Nagasaki-type atomic hiding.
He was
bomb
at
fifty-five
times
more
the time he went into
not bluffing when, on the eve of "Operation Brainstorm,"
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
220
General Honus Barker: "Sitting here at the dinner table, I'm from Joe Louis to the Great pretty sure I can flatten anything on earth
he
told
—
Wall of China."
There is an understandable tendency to look upon Professor Barnhouse as a supernatural visitation. The First Church of Barnhouse in Los Angeles has a congregation numbering in the thousands. He is godlike in neither is
single, shorter
exercise. His is
appearance nor
LQ.
intellect.
The man who disarms
the world
than the average American male, stout, and averse to is
143,
good but certainly not sensational. He celebrate his fortieth birthday, and in good
which
quite mortal, about to
is
he is alone now, the isolation won't bother him too much. He was quiet and shy when I knew him, and seemed to find more companionship in books and music than in his associations at the college. health. If
Neither he nor his powers
fall
outside the sphere of Nature. His
many known physical laws that apply in the field of radio. Hardly a person has not now heard the snarl of "Barnhouse static" on his home receiver. The radiations are affected dynamopsychic radiations are subject
to
by sunspots and variations in the ionosphere.
However, they
differ
portant ways. Their total
from ordinary broadcast waves in several imenergy can be brought to bear on any single
point the professor chooses, and that energy
undiminished by distance. As a weapon, then, dynamopsychism has an impressive advantage over bacteria and atomic bombs, beyond the fact that it costs nothing to use: it
enables the professor to single out
is
critical individuals
and objects
in-
stead of slaughtering whole populations in the process of maintaining
international equilibrium.
As General Honus Barker told the House Military Affairs Committee: "Until someone finds Barnhouse, there is no defense against the Barnhouse Effect." Efforts to "jam" or block the radiations have failed. Premier Slezak could have saved himself the fantastic expense of "Barnhouse-proof"
shelter.
Despite the shelter's twelve-foot-thick lead
armor, the premier has been floored twice while in
There
is
talk of
his
it.
screening the population for
men
potentially as
powerful dynamopsychically as the professor. Senator Warren Foust de-
manded funds tion: "He who Kropotnik said with a
new
month, with the passionate declararules the Barnhouse Effect rules the world!" Commissar much the same thing, so another costly armaments race, for this
twist,
This race
purpose
last
has begun.
at least
has
its
are being coddled by governments like so
may be
The world's best gamblers many nuclear physicists. There
comical aspects.
hundred persons with dynamopsychic talent on earth, myself included. But, without knowledge of the professor's technique, several
Kurt Vonnegut,
221
Jr.
they can never be anything but dice-table despots. With the secret,
it
become dangerous weapons.
It
would probably take them ten years took the professor that long.
house and
will
He who
to
rules the
Barnhouse Effect
is
Barn-
be for some time.
Popularly, the "Age of Barnhouse"
is
said to
have begun a year and
on the day of Operation Brainstorm. That was when dynamopsychism became significant politically. Actually, the phenomenon was discovered in May, 1942, shortly after the professor turned down a direct commission in the Army and enlisted as an artillery private. Like X-rays and vulcanized rubber, dynamopsychism was discovered by accia half ago,
dent. •
From time
•
•
Barnhouse was invited
to time Private
to take part in
games of chance by his barrack mates. He knew nothing about the games, and usually begged off. But one evening, out of social grace, he agreed to shoot craps. It was terrible or wonderful that he played, depending upon whether or not you like the world as it now is. "Shoot sevens. Pop," someone said. So "Pop" shot sevens ten in a row to bankrupt the barracks. He retired to his bunk and, as a mathematical exercise, calculated the odds against his feat on the back of a laundry slip. His chances of doing it, he found, were one in almost ten million! Bewildered, he borrowed a pair of dice from the man in the bunk next to his. He tried to roll sevens again, but got only the usual assortment of numbers. He lay back for a moment, then resumed his toying with the dice. He rolled ten more
—
sevens in a row.
He might have
dismissed the
phenomenon
with a low whistle. But
the professor instead mulled over the circumstances surrounding his two
common: on both occathrough his mind just before he
lucky streaks. There was one single factor in sions, the
same thought
threw the dice.
It
had flashed was that thought train which aligned the professor's train
brain cells into what has since
become
the most powerful
weapon on
earth. •
The
soldier in the next
•
•
bunk gave dynamopsychism
its first
token
of respect. In an understatement certain to bring wry smiles to the faces of the world's dejected demagogues, the soldier said, "You're hotter'n a
The
dice
that did his bidding weighed but a few grams, so the forces involved
were
two-dollar pistol. Pop." Professor Barnhouse was
all
of that.
minute; but the unmistakable fact that there were such forces was earthshaking. Professional caution kept
him from
revealing his discovery
imme-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
222
He wanted more facts and a body of theory to when the atomic bomb was dropped in Hiroshima,
diately.
go with them.
Later
it
made him hold
his peace.
At no time were
was fear that
his experiments, as
Premier
Slezak called them, "a bourgeois plot to shackle the true democracies of the world."
The
professor didn't
In time, he
came
know where they were
leading.
to recognize another startling feature of dyna-
mopsychism: its strength increased with use. Within six months, he was able to govern dice thrown by men the length of a barracks distant. By the time of his discharge in 1945, he could knock bricks loose from
chimneys three miles away. Charges that Professor Barnhouse could have won the last war in a minute, but did not care to do so, are perfectly senseless. When the war ended, he had the range and power of a 37-millimeter cannon, perhaps certainly no more. His dynamopsychic powers graduated from the small-arms class only after his discharge and return to Wyandotte Col-
—
lege. I
enrolled in the Wyandotte Graduate School two years after the
professor had rejoined the faculty. thesis adviser.
I
By chance, he was assigned
was unhappy about the assignment,
figure. I
He
ridiculous
missed classes or had lapses of memory during lectures.
arrived, in fact, his
my
for the professor
somewhat
was, in the eyes of both colleagues and students, a
as
When
shortcomings had passed from the ridiculous to the
intolerable.
"We're assigning you to Barnhouse as a sort of temporary thing," the dean of social studies told me.
He
looked apologetic and perplexed.
man, Barnhouse, I guess. Difficult to know since his return, perhaps, but his work before the war brought a great deal of credit to our "Brilliant
little
school."
When
I
reported to the professor's laboratory for the
first
time,
what
saw was more distressing than the gossip. Every surface in the room was covered with dust; books and apparatus had not been disturbed for months. The professor sat napping at his desk when I entered. The only I
were three overflowing ashtrays, a pair of scissors, and a morning paper with several items clipped from its front page. As he raised his head to look at me, I saw that his eyes were clouded signs of recent activity
with fatigue. "Hi," he said, "just can't seem to get
He young man night."
"Yes
lighted a cigarette, his
hands trembling
done at "You the
sleeping
slightly.
I'm supposed to help with a thesis?"
sir,"
I
said. In
minutes he converted
"You an overseas veteran?" he "Yes,
my
sir."
asked.
my
misgivings to alarm.
Kurt Vonnegut,
"Not
much
"No,
sir."
left
over there,
is
223
Jr.
there?"
He
frowned. "Enjoy the
last
war?"
another war to you?"
"Look
like
"Kind
of, sir."
"What can be done about I
it?"
shrugged. "Looks pretty hopeless."
He
peered
the U.N., and
at
all
me
intently.
"Know anything about
international law,
that?"
up from the papers." "Same here," he sighed. He showed me a fat scrapbook packed with newspaper clippings. "Never used to pay any attention to international politics. Now I study them the way I used to study rats in mazes. Every" body tells me the same thing 'Looks hopeless.' "Nothing short of a miracle " I began. "Believe in magic?" he asked sharply. The professor fished two dice from his vest pocket. "I will try to roll twos," he said. He rolled twos three times in a row. "One chance in about 47,000 of that happening. There's "Only what
I
pick
—
a miracle for
to
you."
He beamed
—
for
an end, remarking that he had
an
instant,
a class
then brought the interview
which had begun ten minutes
ago.
me
and he said no more about his trick with the dice. I assumed they were loaded, and forgot about them. He set me the task of watching male rats cross elecan experiment that had trified metal strips to get to food or female rats been done to everyone's satisfaction in the nineteen-thirties. As though
He was
not quick to take
into his confidence,
—
my work
were not bad enough, the professor annoyed me further with irrelevant questions. His favorites were: "Think we should have dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima?" and "Think every new piece of scientific information is a good thing for humanity?" the pointlessness of
•
•
•
However, I did not feel put upon for long. "Give those poor animals a holiday," he said one morning, after I had been with him only a month. namely, "I wish you'd help me look into a more interesting problem
—
my
sanity." I
returned the
rats to their cages.
"What you must do is simple," he said, speaking inkwell on my desk. If you see nothing happen to it, quietly I
—
relieved,
I
might add
—
softly.
"Watch the
say so, and
I'll
go
to the nearest sanitarium."
nodded uncertainly.
He
locked the laboratory door and drew the blinds, so that
we were
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
224 in twilight for a
moment. "I'm odd,
know," he
I
of myself
said. "It's fear
made me odd."
that's
—
found you somewhat eccentric, perhaps, but certainly not "If nothing happens to that inkwell, 'crazy as a bedbug' is the only description of me that will do," he interrupted, turning on the overhead lights. His eyes narrowed. "To give you an idea of how crazy, I'll tell "I've
you what's been running through my mind when I should have sleeping. I think maybe I can save the world. I think maybe I can every nation a have nation, and do away with war for good. I maybe I can clear roads through jungles, irrigate deserts, build
been
make think
dams
overnight." "Yes,
sir."
"Watch the
inkwell!"
Dutifully and fearfully to
to
I
watched.
A high-pitched humming seemed
come from the inkwell; then it began to vibrate alarmingly, and finally bound about the top of the desk, making two noisy circuits. It stopped,
hummed
again, glowed red, then
popped
in splinters with a blue-green
flash.
Perhaps nets?"
I
my hair stood on end. The professor laughed gently. "Mag-
managed
to say at last.
heaven it were magnets," he murmured. It was then that he told me of dynamopsychism. He knew only that there was such a and it's awful." force; he could not explain it. "It's me and me alone "I'd say it was amazing and wonderful!" I cried. "If all I could do was make inkwells dance, I'd be tickled silly with the whole business." He shrugged disconsolately. "But I'm no toy, my boy. If you like, we can drive around the neighborhood, and I'll show
"Wish
to
—
you what I mean." He told me about pulverized boulders, shattered oaks, and abandoned farm buildings demolished within a fifty-mile radius of not the campus. "Did every bit of it sitting right here, just thinking even thinking hard." He scratched his head nervously. "I have never dared to concentrate as hard as I can for fear of the damage I might do. I'm to the point where a mere whim is a blockbuster." There was a depressing
—
pause.
"Up
for fear of
that
I
until a
few days ago,
what use
haven't any
it
I've
might be put
more
right to
it
thought to,"
it
best to keep
he continued.
than a
man
my
"Now
has a right to
I
secret realize
own an
atomic bomb."
He fumbled through needs to be
said,
Secretary of State.
I
heap of papers. "This says about all that think." He handed me a draft of a letter to the a
Kurt Vonnegut,
Dear
225
Jr.
Sir:
I
which
have discovered a new force which costs nothing
to use,
and
probably more important than atomic energy.
should
like
is
I
used most effectively in the cause of peace, and am, thererequesting your advice as to how this might best be done.
to see fore,
it
Yours truly, A. Barnhouse.
have no idea what
"I
will
happen next," •
•
said the professor.
•
There followed three months of perpetual nightmare, wherein the nation's political and military great came at all hours to watch the professor's tricks.
We
were quartered in an old mansion near Charlottesville, Virginia, to which we had been whisked five days after the letter was mailed. Surrounded by barbed wire and twenty guards, we were labeled "Project Wishing Well," and were classified as Top Secret. For companionship we had General Honus Barker and the State Department's William K. Cuthrell. For the professor's talk of peacethrough-plenty they had indulgent smiles and tical
measures and
at first
realistic thinking.
been almost meek, progressed
So
much
discourse on prac-
treated, the professor,
in a
who had
matter of weeks toward stub-
bornness.
He had
agreed to reveal the thought train by means of which he
mind
dynamopsychic transmitter. But, under Cuthrell's and Barker's nagging to do so, he began to hedge. At first he declared that the information could be passed on simply by word of mouth. Later he said that it would have to be written up in a long report. Finally, at dinner one night, just after General Barker had read the secret orders for Operation Brainstorm, the professor announced, "The report may aligned his
into a
take as long as five years to write."
He
looked fiercely
at
the general.
"Maybe twenty."
The dismay occasioned by
this flat
announcement was
offset
some-
what by the exciting anticipation of Operation Brainstorm. The general was in a holiday mood. "The target ships are on their way to the Caroline Islands at this very moment," he declared ecstatically. "One hundred and twenty of them! At the same time, ten V-2s are being readied for firing in New Mexico, and fifty radio-controlled jet bombers are being equipped for a mock attack on the Aleutians. Just think of it!" Happily he reviewed his orders. "At exactly 1100 hours next Wednesday, I will
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
226
you the order to concentrate; and you, professor, will think as hard as you can about sinking the target ships, destroying the V-2S before they hit the ground, and knocking down the bombers before they reach the Aleutians! Think you can handle it?" The professor turned gray and closed his eyes. "As I told you before, my friend, I don't know what I can do." He added bitterly, "As for this Operation Brainstorm, I was never consulted about it, and it strikes me as childish and insanely expensive." General Barker bridled. "Sir," he said, "your field is psychology, and I wouldn't presume to give you advice in that field. Mine is national defense. I have had thirty years of experience and success. Professor, and I'll ask you not to criticize my judgment." The professor appealed to Mr. Cuthrell. "Look," he pleaded, "isn't it war and military matters we're all trying to get rid of? Wouldn't it be a whole lot more significant and lots cheaper for me to try moving cloud masses into drought areas, and things like that? I admit I know next to nothing about international politics, but it seems reasonable to suppose that nobody would want to fight wars if there were enough of everything to go around. Mr. Cuthrell, I'd like to try running generators where there isn't any coal or water power, irrigating deserts, and so on. Why, you could figure out what each country needs to make the most of its resources, and I could give it to them without costing American taxpayers
give
a penny."
"Eternal vigilance
is
the price of freedom," said the general heavily.
Mr. Cuthrell threw the general a look of mild distaste. "Unfortunately, the general is right in his own way," he said. "I wish to heaven the world were ready for ideals like yours, but
surrounded by brothers, but by enemies. sources that has us on the brink of war
—
it
simply
It isn't
it's
isn't.
We
aren't
a lack of food or re-
a struggle for power.
Who's
going to be in charge of the world, our kind of people or theirs?"
The table. "I
professor
nodded
in reluctant
agreement and arose from the
beg your pardon, gentlemen. You
are, after
all,
better qualified
do whatever you say." He turned to me. "Don't forget to wind the restricted clock and put the confidential cat out," he said gloomily, and ascended the stairs to his bedroom. to judge
what
is
best for the country.
•
I'll
•
•
For reasons of national security. Operation Brainstorm was carried on without the knowledge of the American citizenry which was paying the bill. The observers, technicians, and military men involved in the activity knew that a test was under way a test of what, they had no idea. Only thirty-seven key men, myself included, knew what was afoot.
—
In Virginia, the day for Operation Brainstorm was unseasonably
Kurt Vonnegut,
227
Jr.
cool. Inside, a log fire crackled in the fireplace,
and the flames were
reflected in the polished metal cabinets that lined the living
that
remained of the room's lovely old furniture was
seat, set squarely in the ers.
One
a Victorian love
center of the floor, facing three television receiv-
long bench had been brought in for the ten of us privileged to
The
watch.
room. All
showed, from
television screens
left to right,
the stretch of
which was the rocket target, the guinea-pig fleet, and a section of the Aleutian sky through which the radio-controlled bomber formation would roar. Ninety minutes before H-hour the radios announced that the rockets were ready, that the observation ships had backed away to what was thought to be a safe distance, and that the bombers were on their way. The small Virginia audience lined up on the bench in order of rank, smoked a great deal, and said little. Professor Barnhouse was in his bedroom. General Barker bustled about the house like a woman prepardesert
ing Thanksgiving dinner for twenty.
At ten minutes before H-hour the general came the professor before him. ers,
shepherding
professor was comfortably attired in sneak-
gray flannels, a blue sweater, and a white shirt open at the neck.
The two and
The
in,
of
them
sat side
by side on the love
was cheerful.
perspiring; the professor
screens, lighted a cigarette
"Bombers
and
seat.
He
The
general was rigid
looked
at
each of the
settled back.
sighted!" cried the Aleutian observers.
"Rockets away!" barked the
New Mexico
radio operator.
All of us looked quickly at the big electric clock over the mantel,
while the professor, a half-smile on his face, continued to watch the television sets. In hollow tones, the general
remaining. "Five
.
.
.
four
.
.
.
three
.
.
.
two
counted away the seconds .
.
.
one
.
Professor Barnhouse closed his eyes, pursed his his temples.
He
held the position for a minute.
The
.
.
Concentrate!"
lips,
and stroked
television images
were scrambled, and the radio signals were drowned in the din of Barnhouse static. The professor sighed, opened his eyes, and smiled confidently.
"Did you give it everything you had?" asked the general dubiously. "I was wide open," the professor replied. cries
The television images pulled themselves together, and mingled of amazement came over the radios tuned to the observers. The
Aleutian sky was streaked with the smoke
down
in flames. Simultaneously, there
trails
of bombers screaming
appeared high over the rocket
target a cluster of white puffs, followed by faint thunder.
General Barker shook "Well,
sir,
his
head happily. "By George!" he crowed.
by George, by George, by George!"
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
228
"Look!" shouted the admiral seated next to me. "The
fleet
—
it
wasn't touched!"
"The guns seem to be drooping," said Mr. Cuthrell. We left the bench and clustered about the television sets to examine the damage more closely. What Mr. Cuthrell had said was true. The ships' guns curved downward, their muzzles resting on the steel decks. We in Virginia were making such a hullabaloo that it was impossible to hear the radio reports. We were so engrossed, in fact, that we didn't miss the professor until two short snarls of Barnhouse static shocked us into
sudden
silence.
We
The
radios
went dead.
looked around apprehensively.
rassed guard threw
The
professor was gone.
open the front door from the outside
professor had escaped.
He
brandished
A
ha-
to yell that the
his pistol in the direction of the
which hung open, limp and twisted. In the distance, a speeding government station wagon topped a ridge and dropped from sight into gates,
the valley beyond.
The
air
was
with choking smoke, for every
filled
on the grounds was ablaze. Pursuit was impossible. "What in God's name got into him? bellowed the general. Mr. Cuthrell, who had rushed out onto the front porch, now slouched back into the room, reading a penciled note as he came. He thrust the note into my hands. "The good man left this billet-doux under the door knocker. Perhaps our young friend here will be kind enough to read it to you gentlemen, while I take a restful walk through the woods." vehicle
"
"Gentlemen,^'
I
read aloud, "As the
first
supenveapon with a con-
am
removing myself from your national defense stockpile. Setting a new precedent in the behavior of ordnance, I have humane reasons
science,
for
I
going
off.
A. Barnhouse.'' •
•
•
Since that day, of course, the professor has been systematically destroying the world's armaments, until there
equip an army other than rocks and sharp
is
now
sticks.
little
with which to
His actixities haven't
exactly resulted in peace, but have, rather, precipitated a bloodless
and
"War of the Tattletales." Every nation is flooded with enemy agents whose sole mission is to locate military equipment, which is promptly wrecked when it is brought to the entertaining sort of war that might be called the
professor's attention in the press.
day brings news of more armaments pulverized by dynamopsychism, so has it brought rumors of the professor's whereJust as even,'
abouts. During the last
week alone, three publications
carried articles
proving variously that he was hiding in an Inca ruin in the Andes, in the sewers of Paris, and in the unexplored lower chambers of Carlsbad Cav-
Kurt Vonnegut,
229
Jr.
ems. Knowing the man, I am inclined to regard such hiding places as unnecessarily romantic and uncomfortable. While there are numerous persons eager to kill him, there must be millions who would care for him and hide him. I like to think that he is in the home of such a person.
One
Barnhouse is not dead. Barnhouse static jammed broadcasts not ten minutes ago. In the eighteen months since his disappearance, he has been reported dead some half-dozen times. Each report has stemmed from the death of an thing
unidentified
The
static.
is
man
first
certain: at this writing, Professor
resembling the professor, during a period free of the
three reports were followed at once by renewed talk of
rearmament and recourse
to war.
The
saber-rattlers
have learned
how
imprudent premature celebrations of the professor's demise can be. Many a stouthearted patriot has found himself prone in the tangled bunting and timbers of a smashed reviewing stand, seconds after having
announced that the arch-tyranny of Barnhouse was at an end. But those who would make war if they could, in every country in the world, wait the passing of Professor Barnin sullen silence for what must come
—
house. •
To ask how much longer we must wait for lived stock: his
and the order.
mother
•
•
longer the professor will live
to ask
the blessing of another world war. lived to
be
fifty-three, his father to
life-spans of his grandparents
He might be
is
expected to
live,
on both
sides
He
how much is
of short-
be forty-nine;
were of the same
then, for perhaps fifteen years more,
he can remain hidden from his enemies. When one considers the number and vigor of these enemies, however, fifteen years seems an extraordinary length of time, which might better be revised to fifteen if
days, hours, or minutes.
knows that he cannot live much longer. I say this because of the message left in my mailbox on Christmas Eve. Unsigned, typewritten on a soiled scrap of paper, the note consisted of ten sen-
The
tences.
professor
The
first
nine of these, each a bewildering tangle of psychological
jargon and references to obscure texts, reading.
The
made no
sense to
me
at first
tenth, unlike the rest, was simply constructed and con-
—
no large words but its irrational content made it the most puzzling and bizarre sentence of all. I nearly threw the note away, thinking it a colleague's warped notion of a practical joke. For some reason, though, I added it to the clutter on top of my desk, which included, among other mementos, the professor's dice. It took me several weeks to realize that the message really meant tained
something, that the
first
nine sentences,
when
unsnarled, could be taken
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
230
The tenth still told me nothing. It was only last night discovered how it fitted in with the rest. The sentence appeared in
as instructions.
that
my
I
thoughts
while
last night,
I
was toying absently with the professor's
dice.
promised to have
I
this report
view of what has happened,
I
The
the report incomplete.
few blessings accorded
a
am
on
its
way
to the publishers today. In
obliged to break that promise, or release
delay will not be a long one, for one of the
bachelor
myself
like
is
quickly from one abode to another, or from one
What
property
Fortunately,
I I
health
am
week
as long as a
done,
I
want
I
can be packed
to realize in liquid
move
life
to another.
in a
few hours.
and anonymous form.
may
When
take
this
is
shall mail the report.
have is
just
returned from a
excellent.
Briefly,
I
I
shall
my
doctor,
who
tells
me my
am young, and, with any luck at all, I shall live to for my family on both sides is noted for longevity.
a
Professor Barnhouse must die. But long before
later.
be ready. So, to the saber-rattlers of today
hope, of tomorrow
Barnhouse
visit to
propose to vanish.
Sooner or I
me
way of
not without substantial private means, which
ripe old age indeed,
then
to take with
the ability to
—
I
say:
Be
advised.
Barnhouse
— and even,
will die.
I
But not the
Effect.
Last night,
I
tried
the scrap of paper.
I
nightmarish sentence sevens.
Good-by.
once more
to follow the oblique instructions
took the professor's dice, and then, with the flitting
through
my
mind,
I
on
last,
rolled fifty consecutive
Joseph Heller GOLD'S STEPMOTHER EXCERPT FROM Good as
[Dr.
Bruce Gold,
Gold
a forty-eight-year-old professor of literature, attends a
Friday night family dinner at his
sister Ida's
apartment
in Brooklyn.
Gold's distaste for family dinners, his aversion, in fact, toward
Ed.]
all
forms
of domestic sentiment, stretched back distantly at least until the time of his
graduation from high school and his moving into Manhattan to
tend Golumbia College. university
and
one brother
in
He was
pleased to be entering so prestigious a
vastly relieved at escaping a large family of five sisters
which
all
his life
at-
he had
felt
and
both suffocated and unappre-
ciated. "I
was going to quit college and
Belle at the time they
were
fight in Israel,"
falling in love,
"but
I
had
he had bragged
to
this scholarship to
Columbia."
Gold had not once thought of quitting college or fighting in Israel. And he did not go to Columbia on a scholarship but on money provided by his father, most of which, he understood now, must have been channeled through the old man's irresponsible hands from Sid and three of his older sisters. Muriel, the fourth, had never been known to part happily with a dollar for anyone but herself or her two daughters. Another sister, Joannie, lived in California. Mercifully, she was younger. Joannie had charged away from home in delinquency a long time before in hopes of succeeding as a model or movie actress and was married to an overbearing Los Angeles businessman who disliked coming East and disdained everybody in the family but Gold. Several times a year she flew to New York alone to see just the ones she wanted to. Gold had found himself the center of family attention ever since bringing
home
his
first
faultless report card, or a
composition with an
A
THE
232 plus. Muriel,
who was
BESTOFMODERN HUMOR closest to
him
in
age and aimed her bad temper
him also even then. Ida, who would impress upon Gold his need to do
these days mostly at Ida, was nasty to
officious,
was the
better in
sister
what he did was always perfect. There were times now Gold thought he might go mad from the drenching reverence and affection that still poured over him from Rose and Esther, his two eldest sisters. Whatever expectations he had aroused, he had apparently fulfilled. They shimmered with love whenever they looked at him, and he wished they would stop. While he was in college. Rose would frequently mail or give him a twenty-dollar bill, he remembered, and so would Esther. Like Sid, both had gone to work after high school as soon as they could find jobs. Ida was able to go to college and become a schoolteacher. Ida handed him fives, always with strict instructions about how the money was to be spent. Rose and Ida still worked. Rose as a legal secretary with the firm that had hired her during the Depression, Ida in the public-school system. Ida was assistant principal now in an elementary school, and she was fighting for her sanity against militant blacks and Hispanics who wanted all Jews gone, and said so in just those words. Esther had been widowed two years before. Much of her hair fell out almost overnight, and the rest turned white. She talked vaguely at times of finding employment again as a bookkeeper. But she was fifty-seven, and too timid to try. Muriel, whose husband, Victor, did well in wholesale beef and veal, was a distinct contrast to the others. She dyed her hair black to camouflage the gray and played poker with friends who also enjoyed outings to the racetrack. A chain smoker with a hoarse voice and a tough manner, school, although
Muriel was constantly
spilling cigarette ashes that Ida,
with her zeal for
would brush away with scolding, high-minded comments of disparagement, even in Muriel's own house. Between Sid, the firstborn, therefore, and Gold, the only other male child, stood these four older sisters who often seemed like four hundred and fifty when they flocked around him with their questions, censures, solicitudes, and advice. Ida cautioned him to chew his food slowly. Rose telephoned to warn that it was icy outside. He thought of them all as outdated, naive, and virtually oblivious to the very real proximity of sinfulness and evil. Except for Sid, Gold recalled, and therefore Harriet, his wife. Sid in nimbler years had been discovered one time in San Francisco when he was supposed to be in San Diego on business, in Acapulco one time when he was supposed to be in San Francisco, and on a houseboat in Miami when he was registered at a hotel in Puerto Rico. Once possessed of the means, Sid had learned how to ease his way order,
effortlessly
through
hotels.
Joseph Heller
233
Now
he went out of town only with Harriet on brief vacations or to visit his father in Florida in the winter. Sid was a large, genial, heavyset man with soft flesh and parted gray hair; he had a pronounced facial was short and chubby, with
likeness to their father, although the latter
bushy white hair that stood almost straight up like the hair of a figure in a comic strip receiving a powerful charge of electricity. Gold was lean, tense, and dark, with vivid shadows around his eyes in a crabby, nervous face women found dynamic and sexy. Sid was easing compliantly into an antiquated generation, wearing plain gray or blue suits with white shirts and wide blue or maroon suspenders, whereas their demanding, autocratic old four-flusher of a father, the retired tailor Julius Gold, was
more and more each year
dressing
debonair Hollywood mogul,
like a
favoring cashmere polo shirts and suave blazers.
Inexplicably,
Sid
growing more fond of their father. Far back. Gold remembered, Sid had run away from home and stayed away a whole summer to escape the old man's domineering eccentricities and cantankerous
seemed
to be
boasting.
Gold and
Belle were nearly the last to arrive at Ida's apartment
on
minute afterward. Irv, Ida's husband, was convivial in his role as host. He was a dentist with offices above a paint store on Kings Highway. Already, Gold was having difficulty distinguishing one person from the next. It was a way of coping. He shook hands quickly with Irv, Victor, Sid, Milt, Max, and his father, differentiating between them only in the accumulating letdown he felt
Ocean Parkway; Muriel and Victor entered
a
with each.
Max, Rose's husband, who was slightly diabetic, sipped at a glass of club soda squeamishly. The other men, along with Muriel, drank whis-
women,
had vanished into the kitchen to oversee the unpacking of her potato kugel and be of assistance to Ida, who probably was simultaneously shooing her away and giving
key, the rest of the
soft drinks.
Belle
her things to do, and reprehending her in the same breath for failing to
do them swiftly enough. Everybody there, including his father, had at least one child who was a source of heartache. Gold took bourbon from Irv and began kissing the cheeks of the
women.
Harriet accepted this greeting without pleasure. His stepmother
authorized his approach by bobbing her head above her knitting and inclining her face. Gold bent to her with both forearms at the ready, fearing she might run
him through the neck with one of her
knitting
needles.
Gold's stepmother,
with branches in ficult for
him
who was from an
old Southern Jewish family
made things difFrequently when he spoke to
Richmond and Charleston,
in a variety of peculiar ways.
habitually
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
234
Other times she said, "Don't talk to me." When he didn't talk to her, his father moved up beside him with a hard nudge and directed, "Go talk to her. You too good?" She was always knitting thick white wool. When he complimented her once on her knitting, she informed him with a flounce that she was crocheting. When he inquired next time how her crocheting was going she answered, "I don't her she did not answer
crochet.
I
knit."
all.
Often she called him
away. Sometimes she
He had no
at
came up
to
to her side just to
him and
said,
tell
him
to
move
"Cackle, cackle."
idea what to reply.
Gold's stepmother was knitting an endless strip of something bulky that
was too narrow to be a shawl and too wide and uniformly
be anything
else. It
was around
six
straight to
inches broad and conceivably thou-
sands of miles long, for she had been working on that same strip of
even before her marriage to
knitting
had
a
swimming
vision of that loosely
his father
woven
many
strip
years before.
Gold
of material flowing out
the bottom of her straw bag to the residence Sid found for his father and
summer in Brooklyn in Manhattan Beach and from there all way down the coastline to Florida and into unmeasured regions
her each the
beyond. She never wanted for wool or for depth inside her straw bag into
which the finished product could fall. The yarn came twitching up through one end of the opening in her bag, and the manufactured product, whatever it was, descended, perhaps for eternity, into the other. "What are you making?" he'd asked her one time out of curiosity that could no longer be borne in silence. "You'll see," she replied mysteriously.
He
consulted his father. "Pa, what's she making?"
"Mind your own "I
business."
was only asking."
"Don't ask personal questions." "Rose, what's she knitting?" he asked his
sister.
"Wool," Belle answered. "Belle,
I
know
that.
But what's she doing with
it?"
"Knitting," said Esther.
Gold's stepmother was knitting knitting, and she was knitting endlessly.
Now
she asked,
"Do you
like
my
it
wool?"
"Pardon?"
"Do you
like
my
wool?"
"Of course," he replied. "You never say so," she pouted. "I like
your wool," said Gold, retreating in confusion to a leather
armchair near the doorway.
Joseph Heller
235
he likes my wool," he heard her relating to his brothers-in-law Irv and Max. "But I think he's trying to pull it over my eyes." "How was your trip?" his sister Esther asked dotingly.
"He
told
me
"Fine."
"Where were you?"
said Rose.
"Wilmington."
"Where?" asked Ida, passing with "Washington," said Rose. "Wilmington?"
a serving tray.
"Wilmington."
"Washington."
"Washington?" "Wilmington," he corrected them
"Oh,"
said Rose,
"How was your
and looked
trip?"
all.
"In Delaware."
crestfallen.
asked Ida, passing back.
Gold was going mad. "He said it was fine," answered Esther before Rose could reply, and drifted toward a coffee table on which were platters holding loaves of chopped liver and chopped eggs and onions under attack by small knives spreading each or both onto round crackers or small sections of rye bread or very black pumpernickel.
"Meet any sisters present,
pretty girls there?" Muriel asked.
The youngest
of the
Muriel was ever under obligation to be up-to-date.
Gold answered, with the required grin. Muriel glowed. Irv chuckled and Victor, Muriel's husband, looked embarrassed. Rose stared from face to face intently. Gold suspected that she had grown hard of hearing, and perhaps did not know. Her husband. Max, a postal worker, was slurring his words of late, and Gold wondered "Not
if
this time,"
anyone but himself had noticed.
Esther returned with a plate prepared for him, and a saltshaker aloft in her other hand. "I brought these all for you," she announced in her trembling voice. "And your
own
saltshaker."
Gold cringed. "Don't spoil him," Muriel joked gruffly, spilling ashes onto her bosom from a cigarette hanging from her mouth.
The women
in Gold's family believed
he
liked his food excessively
salted.
"Don't
salt
already seasoned
it
until
you
taste it," Ida yelled
from across the room.
"I
it."
Gold ignored her and continued salting the cracker he was holding. Other people's fingers plucked the remaining pieces from his plate. Es-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
236
ther and Rose each brought
him more.
Sid watched with amusement.
So many fucking faces, Gold thought. So many people. And all of them strange. Even Belle, these days. And especially his stepmother. He would never forget his first encounter with his stepmother. Sid had flown to Florida for the wedding and returned with her and his father for a reception at his home in Great Neck. There was an uncomfortable silence after the introductions when no one seemed sure what to say next. Gold stepped forward with a gallant try at putting everyone at ease. "And what," he said in his most courtly manner, "would you like us to call you?" "I
would
like
you
to treat
me
as
replied with graciousness equal to his all
as
my
very
"Very
own
well,
my own own.
me
children. Please call
children do," Gussie Gold
would Mother." "I
Mother," Gold agreed. "Welcome
like to
think of you
to the family."
"I'm not your mother," she snapped.
Gold was the only one who laughed. Perhaps the others had ceived immediately what he had missed. She was insane. •
•
per-
•
Gold's stepmother had been brought up never to be seen eating in
and she entered the dining room as always with her knitting needles and her straw tote bag. Fourteen adults were grouped elbow to elbow at a table designed for ten. Gold knew that his was not the only leg blocked by supporting braces underneath. I have been to more meals like this than I can bear to remember. Gold lamented secretly. Ida's daughter was out for the evening, her son was away at college. "I can see on the table," Sid announced with such generalized amiability that Gold's muscles all bunched reflexively in anticipation of some barbed danger nearby, "Belle's potato kugel, Esther's noodle pudpublic,
and Rose's ."He faltered. made the matzoh balls," Rose said, blushing.
ding, Muriel's potato salad, "I
"Rose's
matzoh
.
.
balls."
"And my wool," said Gold's stepmother. "And your wool." "Do you like my wool?" She seemed coquettishly dependent on Sid's
good opinion. "It's
the tastiest wool in the whole world,
I
"He doesn't like it," she said with a glance "I like it," Gold apologized weakly. "He never tells me he likes it." "I like "I
your wool."
was not talking
to you," she said.
bet." at
Gold.
Joseph Heller
237
more loudly than the others. Victor was convinced both looked down upon him. This was true, but Gold
Victor laughed
Gold and Irv bore him no unkind feelings. Victor, red of face and sturdy as a bull, was sweet to Muriel and liked Belle, and could always be relied on to send one of his meat trucks and some laborers when anything heavy was to be transported. His posture was so nearly perfect both sitting and standing that he seemed to be holding himself erect at enormous physical cost. Gold was positive he would be the first among them to be felled by a that
heart attack.
it.
of
I
made
honey cake," Harriet put in poutingly. "I'm sure I ruined was going to make a Jell-O mold but I know you all must be sick "I
a
it."
"And
honey cake." "Much starch," said Max, who, Harriet's
in addition to
susceptible to certain circulatory imbalances.
Max
declined everything but
having diabetes, was
Wearing
some chicken wings,
a slice of pot roast,
from which he separated the fat, and string beans. Esther was served by Milt, a suitor courting her patience.
She waited
stiffly
a worried frown.
in
almost wordless
without looking at him. Milt, the older
brother of her deceased husband's business partner, was a careful, respectful
man who
sixty-five,
that
talked
little
in the
presence of the family. Milt was past
older than Sid, and had never been married. With a
approached
vivacity,
movement
he flicked a second spoonful of Esther's noodle and then a spoonful onto his own. Esther
pudding onto her plate, thanked him with a nervous smile. There were platters of meatballs and stuffed derma on the table, too, and a deep, wide bowl of potatoes mashed with chicken fat and fried onions that Gold could have eaten up
all
by himself.
Ida asked Gold, "What's new?"
"Nothing." "He's writing a book," said Belle. "Really?" said Rose.
"Another book?" scoffed
his father.
"That's nice," said Esther.
"Yes," said Belle.
"What's "It's
it
about?" Muriel asked Gold.
about the Jewish experience," said
Belle.
"That's nice," said Ida.
"About what?" demanded his father. "About the Jewish experience," answered across the table to Gold. "Whose?"
Sid,
and then called
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
238
"Whose what?" said Gold warily. "Whose Jewish experience?" "I
haven't decided yet."
"He's writing
some
"Most of it
going to be very general," Gold added with perceptible
is
articles too," said Belle.
reluctance.
mean?" Gold's father wanted to be told right then. "It's a book about being Jewish," said Belle. Gold's father snorted. "What does he know about being Jewish?" he roared. "He wasn't even born in Europe." "What's
"It's
it
about being Jewish in America," said
Gold's father was fazed only a second.
Belle.
"He
know so much than him too." don't
been Jewish in America longer "They're paying him money," Belle argued persistently. Gold wished she would stop. "How much you getting?" demanded Gold's father. about that
"A
either.
I
lot," said Belle.
"How much? A
lot to
him maybe
ain't so
much
to others. Right,
Sid?"
"You
said
Pop."
it.
"How much you
getting?"
"Twenty thousand dollars," said Belle. The amount, Gold could see, made a stunning impact, especially on his father, who looked unaffectedly disappointed. Gold himself would have deferred naming a figure. It must seem a fortune to Max and Rose and Esther, and even, perhaps, to Victor and Irv. They would see only and forget the work.
a windfall,
"That
is
"That
ain't so
more than
nice," said Rose.
much," Gold's
my
that in
And lost more "Some people
father
grumbled dejectedly.
only a
start.
And
made
time."
too.
Gold thought.
write books for the movies
and make much more,"
Harriet observed in a disheartened way, while Sid chuckled
Gold opened
"I
mouth
his five
to retaliate
thousand of that
when is
softly.
Belle said, "Well, that's
for research.
It
isn't
even
charged against the guarantee." "That's nice," said Esther quickly, eager to
come
"I bet that's very nice."
"What does "It's
"No,
that
mean?" asked Sid
hard to explain," said Belle. it
isn't."
seriously.
to Gold's support.
Joseph Heller
239
"That's what you told me."
"You wouldn't "Don't
listen
when
I
tried."
fight," Harriet flittered in quickly
with malice.
means," Gold said, addressing himself mainly to Sid and Irv, "that five thousand is charged off as a publishing expense instead of to me, even if I don't spend it. I can make that much more in royalties from "It
book
sales." "Isn't that
what
"That sounds
said?" said Belle.
I
very good provision," Esther's elderly beau.
like a
Milt, observed ever so diffidently,
countant and would understand
and Gold remembered he was an
too.
"Bruce," Irv ventured, putting a
thumb and
forefinger to his chin.
Since his dental practice had ceased growing, Irv had developed a his right bly.
ac-
tic in
cheek that often gave him the appearance of smiling inexplica-
"You
aren't going to write about
any of
"No, of course not," Gold responded.
us, are
you?"
"Why would
I
do anything
like that?"
A wave "Why
demanded
not?"
Gold's voice "It's
Then all faces fell. "Ain't we good enough?"
of relief went around the table.
still
his father.
tended to weaken in argument with the old man.
not that kind of book."
"No?" bellowed his father, rearing up an inch or so and stabbing at Gold an index finger that curved like a talon. "Well, I've got news for you, smart guy. You ain't gonna do it so hot without me. It's what I told
you then, and what
what I told you from the beginning. You ain't the man for the job." He changed in a second from choleric belligerence to serene self-confidence and sat back with his head cocked to the side. "Good, Sid?" he asked, turning and looking up.
"You
said
Julius
it.
I
told
you now.
It's
Pop."
Gold allowed
his eyelids to lower in a look of narcissistic
contentment.
Those two hostility for
Gold told himself, reaching with misplaced the bowl of mashed potatoes and onions to ladle himself out bastards.
another large helping.
And
they never even liked each other.
"Did you ever hear from the White House again?" asked
his sister
Rose, beaming.
"No," said
Belle, before
Gold could
reply,
and Harriet looked
pleased.
"But he heard from them twice," said Esther. "He got two phone calls." "It
wasn't really the White House," Gold corrected.
"It
was from a
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
240 friend
went through graduate school with who works
I
in the
White
House."
same
"That's the
White House,
thing," said Ida. "He's in the
isn't
he?" "I
don't
know where he was when he made
the
phone
call."
Gold's
tone was faintly sarcastic. "In the White House," said Belle, with no change of expression. "
"Ralph Newsome.
"Thanks," said Gold. "There was some chance
I
might forget
his
name." "I
never heard of him," said Harriet.
on the
"Well, he's
President's staff," said Muriel,
and turned
to
Gold. "Isn't he?"
Gold plunged his face into his plate and was silent. "I went past the White House once when I was a sweet and very pretty little girl up from Richmond," Gold's stepmother recalled. "It looked dirty."
"But he said he liked your book, didn't he?" Esther recalled.
"Not
my book," Gold
explained uncomfortably.
"His review of the President's book," said Belle. "I'll
bet the President liked
it
too," said Rose.
"He did," said Belle. "They offered him a job." "The President?" asked Ida. "They did not," said Gold irately. "Not the President. asked
if I'd
like a job to
said Irv.
eagerly.
he would think about you not to tell them."
it,"
said Belle.
don't care," Belle answered. "They're your family.
probably take
"You "I
Max
said
"I told "I
me,"
all."
see?" said Belle.
"What'd you say?" asked
"He
was only
ever given any thought to working in Washington. That's
"That sounds
"You
I
it if
said
You
said you'd
the job was a good one."
you wouldn't go,"
said Gold.
won't," said Belle.
"Twenty thousand?" Gold's father suddenly exclaimed with a gargantuan guffaw. "Me they would give a million!" Ashes, Gold grieved wildly, chewing away at his mouthful of mashed potatoes and bread more vigorously than he realized. The food! In my mouth to ashes the food is turning! It has been this way with my father almost
From
all
my life.
the beginning, Gold ruminated now.
When
I
said
I
was think-
Joseph Heller
me
ing of going into business, he told
me to go
he told not what you know.
to stay in school, It's
When
he'd say dry.
I
241
to stay in school.
"Dope.
into business.
who you know. Some
It's
"
said dry,
he
said wet. If
When decided Why waste time? I
father. If
said black,
I
he
said wet,
I
said white.
niggers, they're ruining the neighborhood, he said one and all, and that's it. Fartig. That was when he was in real estate. Far back, that peremptory cry of Fartig would instantly create an obediIf
said white,
I
.
.
.
ent silence that everybody in the family would be in horror of breaking, including Gold's mother. It
was no secret
schmuck. for
It
to
anyone
would be unfair
to say his father
he had always considered Gold
"From the beginning,"
that his father considered
was disappointed
Gold in
a
him,
a schmuck.
his father
showed
off again with inverted
though Gold were elsewhere, "I knew he would never amount to much. And was I right? It's a good thing his mother never lived to see the day he was born." "Pop," Sid corrected him tactfully. "Bruce was already in high familial pride, as
school
"And for a as
Mom died."
when
a finer
woman
never lived," responded Gold's father, nodding
moment in bewitched
though her death
Gold vindictively "Or died," he added
recollection, then glaring at
at forty-nine
had been
his fault.
faintly.
Once when Gold was
visiting in Florida, his father
drew him across
meet some friends and introduced him by saying, "This is my son's brother. The one that never amounted to much." His father's lasting appraisal of Gold as of almost every other human in the world, including Sid was that he lacked business sense. Despite his father's unbroken record of failure in more occupations and business ventures than Gold knew about, he judged himself a model of splendid achievements and rare acumen, and he never shrank from prea street just to
—
—
senting himself as a shrewd observer of everyone else's affairs, including
those of Sid and General Motors.
One
neurial judgments this year about
was that "they got no talent "They're big, to do. If
I
owned
all
all
of his
more penetrating
entrepre-
American Telephone and Telegraph
in the front office."
right," said Julius
Gold, "but they don't know what
those telephones, oh boy
— no business would run
without me." His
visit
New York this year, ostensibly May. A staunchly irreligious man,
to
for dental work,
had
he now seemed oddly determined to remain through all the Jewish holidays, and he kept disclosing new ones of which the others had not heard.
commenced
in
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
242
"He must be reading the fucking Talmud," Gold had grumbled to Belle when his father cited Shmini Atzereth. Belle pretended not to hear. "Or else he's making them up." Gold found a kindred antipathy that surpassed his own. "What's the matter?" she had muttered snidely the week of her father-inlaw's arrival. "They have no dentists in Miami?" It was a fragile and temporary alliance, Gold knew, for Harriet had been methodically putting distance between herself and the family for some time, as though in thrifty preparation for some clear and farsighted eventuality. Harriet had a widowed mother and an older unmarried sister In Harriet,
to help support.
Gold's father was
five feet
two and subject
to
unexpected attacks of
wisdom. "Make money!" he might shout suddenly, apropos of nothing, and his stepmother would add liturgically, "You should all listen to your father."
"Make money!" he shouted suddenly now, a trance with a
as
though sprung from
burning revelation. "That's the only good thing
I
ever
learned from the Christians," he continued with the same volatile fervor.
good thing. And
"Roast beef
is
better than boiled beef, that's another
sirloin steak
is
better than shoulder steak. Lobsters are dirty.
They
got scales and crawl.
"You should
can't
listen to
reprimanding gaze of
his
even swim. And
your father more."
stepmother rested
that's
It
last,
it.
They
ain't
Fartig."
was on Gold that the longest,
and most
se-
verely.
"And what does he want me
to do?"
"Whatever he does," answered his father, "is wrong. One thing," he said, "one thing I always taught my children," he went on, as though addressing
somebody
else's,
"was not the value of a
of a thousand dollars, ten thousand. fantastic disregard of the facts
others,
he paused
to
learned that lesson and
and
And
all
of
but the value
— except one"— embarrassment of the — disgust Gold "have them
in
to the visible
look with murderous
now
dollar,
at
got plenty, especially Sid here, and
Joannie." His eyes misted over at mention of his youngest daughter,
little
who The
had bolted from the fold so earlv. "I alwavs knew how to advise. upshot is, that when I get old" Gold could no longer believe his ears as he heard this preposterous braggart of eighty-two declaiming "when I get old, nobody will ever have to support me but you children." Gold, his temper rising, felt no compunction about lashing back. "Well, I don't like to boast," he replied roughly, "but when I was with the Foundation seven years ago "You ain't with them any more!" his father cut him short.
—
—
—
Joseph Heller
243
Gold surrendered with a shudder and pretended to search his plate as Rose, Muriel, and all the brothers-in-law clapped in delight and Esther and Ida rocked with laughter. Gold had the terrible presentiment that some might leap onto their chairs and hurl hats into the air. His father again sat back slowly with that smile of self-enchantment and let his eyes fall closed. Gold was constrained to smile. He would not want anyone to guess how truly crushed he felt. And then, Sid spoke. "Behold a child," Sid intoned rabbinically without warning, as though musing aloud upon a slice of Esther's stuffed intestine held on a fork halfway
between
his plate
and
his
mouth, and Gold
felt his spirits
sink further, "by nature's kindly law, pleased by a rattle, tickled by a
straw."
Gold saw in a flash that he was totally ruined. It was check, mate, match, and defeat from the opening move. He was caught, whether he took the bait or declined, and he could only marvel in dejection as the rest of the stratagem unfolded around him as symmetrically and harmoniously as ripples in water.
The theistic
others were struck with
wonder by
Sid's
eloquence and pan-
wisdom.
"That sounds okay to me," Victor murmured.
"Me
too," said
"It's
nice," said Esther. "Isn't
Max. it?"
"Yes," Rose agreed. "Beautiful."
"See
how smart my
"You should
first
listen to
son
is?" said
Gold's father.
your older brother more," said Gold's step-
mother, and aimed the point of her knitting needle "It really is beautiful,"
ish schoolteacher,
professor,
at Gold's eyes.
Ida assented reverently. Ida, the shrew-
was considered the
intelligent one; Gold, the college
was a novelty. Ida looked Gold
fully in the face.
"Isn't
it,
Bruce?
There was no escape. "Yes," said Belle.
Gold was trapped two, three, four, maybe five or six ways. If he mentioned Alexander Pope, he would be parading his knowledge. If he didn't, Sid would, unmasking him as an ignoramus. If he corrected the prepositional errors, he would appear pedantic, quarrelsome, jealous. If he gave no answer at all, he would be insulting to Ida, who, with the others, was awaiting some reply. It was no fair way, he sulked, to treat a middle-aged. Phi Beta Kappa, cum laude graduate of Columbia who was a doctor of philosophy and had recently been honored with praise from the White House and the promise of consideration for a high-level posi-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
244
Oh,
you fucking cocksucker, lamented the doctor of philosophy and prospective governmental appointee. You nailed me again. "Pope," he decided at length to mumble unwillingly, keeping his tion.
Sid,
face steadfastly
down toward
"What?" snapped
"He
said 'Pope,'
"What's "It's
it
his portion of Ida's meatballs.
his father.
him
Sid informed
"
congenially.
mean?"
by Alexander Pope," Gold asserted loudly. "Not by Sid."
how smart our
"See
announced, chewing con-
kid brother is?" Sid
tentedly.
"He
didn't say
was by him,
it
"
Harriet pointed out nicely in defense
of her husband. "Did he?" "Isn't
it
just as beautiful
anyway?" Ida reasoned with him pedagog-
ically.
"Yes," said Belle. "Is
it
any
less beautiful
because
it's
by Alexander Pope and not by
Sid?" asked Irv. Belle shook her
head
and Max. abhorrent. "The implication was there," he
firmly, as did Victor, Milt,
Gold found them all exclaimed sullenly. "And the prepositions are wrong.
"
"Brucie, Brucie, Brucie," entreated Sid generously, the essence of
tolerance and reasonableness. "Are you going to be sore at
me
just be-
cause of a couple of prepositions?" There was a murmurous shaking of heads. "We'll
make them
right
"Sid, you're fucking
The
though
as
straightened menacingly.
incredulous shriek.
he sounded "All of is
my
"He
like a
break his bones!
"This
over again!" Gold shouted. "Aren't you?"
moments were exciting. The women averted their who did not like bad language ever in front of women,
and Victor, reddened further,
I'll
you're going to be so finicky."
next few
eyes,
that
me
if
Then
keeping
his
in a frenzy.
Someone walk me
ascended to such
"Fuck, he said?
I'll kill
him!
you leave Bruce alone," Ida ordered sternly, restoring order. house, and I won't permit any fighting."
of freckles across her nose. "Bruce his trip to
is
probably
still
woman
with a saddle
very tired."
Washington," said Esther.
"Wilmington," said
Belle.
Sid, licking his lips with a look of triumph,
for a
shrillness
over to him."
"That's right," entreated Rose, a large, kindly
"From
and with an
check,
in
Gold's father jumped to his feet
said fuck?" His voice
chicken
temper
second piece of Harriet's honey cake.
reached with
his fingers
John Mortimer * EXCERPT FROM
CLINGING TO THE WRECKAGE
Sex, like love, poets. to
my
He would
announce,
marble."
"I
And
I
father thought, had been greatly overestimated by the
often pause at teatime, his biscuit halfway to his mouth,
have never had many mistresses with thighs like white was at a loss to tell whether he meant that he had not
had lady friends with particularly marmoreal few mistresses of any sort. Like most children a subject
on which
past, a fiancee other
"poor
it
my
mother,
and who had died young.
girl"
found
I
was best to avoid speculation.
than
I
he had had
thighs, or that
whom
my
father's sex life
He had
had, in his
he always referred to
never discovered her
name
as his
or the
cause of her death.
"Love at
affairs aren't
much
an early age. "Consider
ful wife.
They
The
of a subject for
this story
wife confesses
all
of a lover,
to her
drama really," he told me a husband and an unfaith-
husband.
are closeted in the living-room together.
He
sends for her lover.
The
wife stands outside
the door, trembling with fear. She strains her ears to discover what's
going on in the room. perhaps? At
last
Some
terrible quarrel?
A duel
or fight to the death
she can stand the suspense no longer. She
the door and what does she see? Blood? Broken furniture?
open
flings
One
of
them
on the carpet? Not at all. The two men are sitting by the fire drinking bottled ale and discussing the best method of pruning apple trees. Naturally, the woman's furious. She packs and leaves for her stretched out
mother's."
Was my
father any of the characters in that unromantic story?
Not
never asked him and
now
the husband, but was he, perhaps, the lover? I
I
have no means of finding out.
However,
my
father
would often
recite,
and usually
at teatime,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
246
poetry of a sensual nature. Swinburne had been his undergraduate vourite and he often repeated, with a rehsh of rolHng
Can you
Men
hurt me, sweet
lips,
though
touch them, and change in a
I
fa-
r's:
hurt you?
trice
The lilies and languors of virtue For the raptures and roses of vice. "Poor old Algernon Charles got by way of commentary. "The roses
uncomfortable
as you'll certainly find out.
ridiculous positions."
cut
wrong as usual," he would add and raptures of vice are damned it
more bread and
And he would go on
You have
to get into
with the recital as
butter or spooned out the
such
my mother
homemade marrow
jam:
We shift
and bedeck and bedrape us. Thou art noble and nude and antique; Libitina thy mother, Priapus
Thy
father, a
We play And
Tuscan and Greek.
with light loves in the portal,
wince and relent and
Loves
and we know
die,
refrain
thee immortal.
Our Lady of Pain. "Sorry the sound of It
stuff, as
it
so happens,"
my
father
commented, "but
I
like
it."
follows
from
all this
that
my
on the subject of sex an eleven-year-old boy. At about that father's advice
was not of much practical value to age the whole business hit me like a raging epidemic, causing constant opportunities to embrace myself passionately
me
among
to seek
the dead
and dusty, outdated law books and motheaten blankets in our loft, or in houses in the bracken which I now ran as bachelor establishments. At my prep school I fell in love with Jenks, but this love was largely unconsummated, apart from a clumsy hug in the school museum, a place where the air was polluted by the prize exhibit, a large and inadequately cured elephant's foot which had been turned into a waste-paper basket. I loved Annabella and Ginger Rogers when she wore jodhpurs and a hacking jacket, and Deanna Durbin and Greta Garbo when she was dressed as a boy in Queen Christina. I was lately talking to an elderly, but still bright-eyed. General who said, "I first fell in love with Cherubino with his nice white breeches and dear little sword." It was years before I flies
got to
know
John Mortimer
247
my
prep school years was about
Figaro, but the image for
right.
The
when
truth was that from the time
the bracken with
Iris
Jones to the end of
stopped keeping house in
I
my
time
at
Harrow, seven or
when I might as well have entered a Dominican order for female company I enjoyed, I knew absolutely nothing about girls.
eight years
all
the
In
one-sex schools and during lonely and isolated holidays chrysalis of vague, schoolboy homosexuality.
Even when
I
I
was
in a
got to Oxford,
and did make some expeditions away from the safe dormitory base, the girls I preferred were still boyish. Betty Grable was less my style than Veronica Lake and Katharine Hepburn who, so Frank Hauser assured
The Philadelphia Story
us, acted in
as the natural bridge into the hetero-
sexual world.
The
sight of a
Cockney accent and
fierce
woman
and
in class;
and
settled
down
Our homosexuality was choice.
We
were
my
if
public school was almost as rare as a
we
spotted one
for the night
therefore dictated by necessity rather than
because the steak and kidney was
is
in the
middle of the suburbs: the tomb in the
and composed poetry
where Byron once
looked over rolling
meadows now commands It
was only
Metropolitan Line and we used to jeered at as
we went up
a
lay
few stops from Baker Street on the
sit
in the smoke-filled carriages to
stick
with a dark-blue hill,
tassel.
be
We
class,
were isolated and put
although once again
I
in
We
weren't
although a Prefect
might occasionally give one of them sixpence to carry up
above
he
a fine view of the semis of
allowed to speak to the boys at the bottom of the
account of sex and
as
to Lord's, dressed in top hat, pearl-grey waistcoat,
morning coat and silver-topped
the beginning of term.
to cold cuts
•
•
parish churchyard
Hillingdon and Pinner.
condemned
"off."
•
Harrow-on-the-Hill
was, as often as not, a
by a butler called "George."
generation of diners
like a
it
We were waited on at table by footmen in blue
elderly matron.
tailed coats
at
his suitcase at
quarantine both on
found myself educated
my situation, among various "Honourables" who were called "Mis-
Within our group we were again strictly segregated. There were the "one yearers" who had to keep all their buttons done up, ter" in roll-call.
"two yearers"
who
could undo one jacket button, "three yearers"
could undo two and "four yearers
"
who
who
could wear fancy waistcoats and
put their hands in their pockets. "Five yearers" were said to be allowed
grow moustaches or even marry a wife if such a thing were available. If "four yearers" mixed with "one yearers" the worst was suspected and very often turned out to be true. to
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
248 I
cannot say
I
found Harrow brutal or
my
time particularly un-
happy, but
life
there never approached the Elizabethan splendours and
miseries of
my
prep school. Harrow's great advantage was that we had
rooms of our own, although in the first year these had to be shared with one other boy, and these did provide a sort of oasis of privacy. Each room had a coal fire and a wooden bed which let down from the wall on which various political slogans were burned in poker-work, such as "Death to the Boers" and "No Home Rule for Ireland." You could bring your own furniture and set out your own books on the shelves and enjoy some of the privileges of a long-term, good conduct prisoner. (It's rightly said that the great advantage of an English public school education is that no subsequent form of captivity can hold any particular terror for you. A friend who was put to work on the Burma railway once told me that he was greeted, on arrival, by a fellow prisoner-of-war who said, "Cheer up. It's not half as bad as Marlborough.") The first boy I shared a room with was called Weaver. He had
smooth dark hair which he slicked down with "Anzora" ("Anzora masters the hair," I had heard about it on Radio Luxembourg). His parents, he told me, were extremely wealthy and had a large house in the New Forest. I was impressed with Weaver until I met a boy called Marsh who told me, "Weaver's really extremely common. His parents have sideplates at dinner."
"Side-plates?"
"Yes. Side-plates.
To put your bread
on.
Not
at
luncheon. Every-
one has side-plates at luncheon. At dinner." He explained carefully, as though to a backward foreigner, matters which seemed to him perfectly obvious.
"But
if
you don't have
side-plates at dinner
what do you put your
bread on?"
"You crumble it. On the "Don't you know anything?" "Not very much." It
was clear that
I
table."
Marsh looked
at
me with great pity.
didn't. •
•
•
"Properly shined shoes are the mark of a good regiment and a
decent Classical Shell.
It
gives
me
little
pleasure to listen to Virgil being
construed by a boy with shoes the colour of elephant's hide. Look down,
and when you can see your faces in your toe-caps you shall inherit the earth. You shall wear shined shoes at Speech Day and enjoy the delights of strawberries and cream and salmon may-on-naise! You shall wear your shined shoes in the Classical Fifth and in the Classical Sixth also shall you wear them. And if your boots are shined and your puttees neat on
John Mortimer
249
parade you shall pass out of the school Corps into the Brigade of Guards."
was strange that so many of my schoolmasters seemed to have been permanently affected by the Old Testament as seen through the It
prose of Rudyard Kipling.
My
Harrow was
charming retired Major of the Brigade of Guards. He inspected our shoes and finger-nails each morning, but otherwise treated us with great gentleness. My Harrow friends stayed longer in my life than those I had met at earlier schools. We were thrown together in the lower regions of our House, we ate together with our faces to the wall, and Keswick, the Head Boy, would shout at us if we turned round. We loitered in one another's rooms and "took exercise" by changing into running clothes and sitting gossiping or reading Roger Fry in the lavatories below the Fives courts. My closest friend was Oliver, known to his many enemies as "Oily," Pensotti, who had about him the vaguely seductive aura of holidays in Bandol and bedrooms in Mayfair. He wore scuffed suede shoes and used a sort of dead white face powder to cover his spots. He used to accompany Radio Luxembourg with the soft musical scrape of a pair of wire brushes played on the top of a suitcase. He came into my life, and indeed left it, shrouded in an aura of mystery. If I asked him any questions about himself he would look vaguely amused and avoid giving anything first
master
at
a
away.
"Where do you live, Pensotti?" "Where do I live? Ah. That's what I'm always you
like to
help
me
asking myself.
Would
with a few suggestions?"
Or, "What does your father do, Pensotti?"
"What does he do? You mean what does he do, exactly? A lot of people have wanted to know the answer to that, especially my Ma." I subsequently met an elderly lady who claimed to be Pensotti's mother. She had bright red hair, carried a poodle and spoke in what she alleged was a South American accent. She lived in a flat in Charles Street with glass-topped tables and a lot of wrought-iron furniture. I never met Pensotti pere, nor did I learn any more about Oliver's childhood. It seemed to have been spent around the world and he could speak French, Spanish and
The
Italian.
other friend,
who
lasted in
my
life
for
many
years,
was Martin
He was a large, rather clumsy but extremely kind and goodboy. He would always laugh at our jokes, buy us great plates of
Witteridge.
natured
egg and chips in the school shop and consent to after
page of the novel
approach
On
I
to the style of
listen as
was writing about Harrow
I
read out page
in the nearest possible
Aldous Huxley.
the fringe of our group, yelling abuse at us or occasionally
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
250
kicking his
non.
way
was Tainton. Tainton was a phenome-
into our midst,
have never since met anyone
I
in the least
Hke Tainton.
I
had
always hoped that his kind died out with cock-fights and bear-baiting.
The
first
thing to be said about Tainton was that he was extremely
However, he was as tough and leathery as a jockey. He boasted that his mother had given birth to him on the hunting-field, after which minor intrusion into a day's sport she went on to be up with the kill at Thome Wood according to Tainton, but then Tainton was, on many matters, a most unreliable witness. His habitual expression was a discontented scowl, after which his face would become bright red and suffused with anger. He had yellow curls which stood up on end, and ears like jug handles. On certain very rare occasions he smiled, and his smile had a sort of shy innocence and even charm. At all times and in all places Tainton was a source of continual trouble. Before a breathless audience he tried to cross the lake by swinging from a sort of trapeze, made up from his bed-linen, and fell in. He small.
broke windows, used unspeakable language to the matron,
Morning Post and, at
as
Keswick was reading
home and
it,
put stray cats into people's beds
during the course of a hunt
in the ladies' lavatory,
having
first
set fire to the
dosed
it
ball,
shut a Shetland pony
with castor
oil.
Tainton was
apparently born without a sense of fear and was quite impervious to the
consequences of
Among
his outrages.
his other distinctions
Tainton was a
prize,
you could say a
champion, masturbator. No doubt we all did our best in this direction, but with Tainton masturbation reached Olympic standards. There was a story about him which earned him considerable respect; but as it depended on the uncorroborated evidence of Tainton himself, it may not have been true. It seems that the school Chaplain, Mr. Percy, called on Tainton in his room, surprised him at his usual exercise and said, deeply shocked, "Really, my boy, you should save that up till you are married." "Oh, I'm doing that, sir," Tainton answered with his rare smile, "I've already got several jam jars full." •
Our House was
•
•
presided over by a gentle English liberal called Mr.
Lamb. This housemaster was given hell at lunchtime by Keswick, who warmly espoused the Fascist cause in Spain, whereas Mr. Lamb was of the opinion that the Republicans were really doing their best and behaving quite decently, liberals,
Mr.
all
Lamb had
for real bastards,
such
things taken into account. Like
many
English
his blind spots, including a wish-fulfilling liking
as
admiration in the history
class.
whom
he spoke with servile However, there was absolutely no harm
Napoleon, about
John Mortimer to
Mr. Lamb.
and natural could undo tinction
He
believed that
justice and, all
my
between
laws were founded on
all
when
251
common
suggested to him that might
I
my
buttons during
sen.se
mean
second year, he attempted
I
a dis-
conventions and the law of nature which caused
social
him visible pain. It was this gentle creature, devoted to reason, the Webbs, Gladstone and Macaulay who had thrust upon him the appalling task of educating Tainton.
"John.
I
know
racy, for instance. I
Lamb,
And
you and
I
share certain values. About democ-
the Republicans in Spain."
know whether to throw my fist in the air, embrace Mr. him on both cheeks and call him "Camarada." Instead I said
didn't kiss
weakly, "Yes,
"So shared a liberal
that
I
sir."
have thought you might be a
room with young Tainton. I'm
stabilizing influence if
sure,
"
you
the archetypal English
muttered with hopeless optimism, "that there's
much good
in the
lad." I
as
my
have not read,
in
my
wildest divorce cases, of marriages as violent
cohabitation with Tainton. As soon as
I
entered the
room
chair splintered against the wall; Tainton was in an evil
crouched
for a spring. His rages
extremely destructive. spit in
my
Virginia
the manuscript of
He would
were tear
terrible, totally
mood and
unpredictable and
up my Van Gogh reproductions,
Woolf and once he poured
my
a flung
a bottle of green ink over
Aldous-Huxley-type novella. At night he would
groan, have nightmares, subconsciously re-enact his birth on the hunt-
and in solitary fashion, prepare himself for the rigours of married life. At rare moments he would show unexpected charm, when he leafed through his large collection of photographs of Sonja Henie or cultivated mustard and cress on the silken surface of his top hat. My life with Tainton might be described as days of anxiety and nights of fear. I had absolutely no idea what was going to happen next. We used to be settled down for the night by George the butler, who ing-field or,
entered our
tireless
room
in a tailed coat, said,
"Goodnight, Sor!", seized the
and departed switching off the light in one fluent gesture. One evening Tainton hit on the expedient of heating the poker's handle until it was just not red hot and put it ready for George to seize and burn off several fingers. Spot on cue George entered, said "Goodnight, Sor!" and astounded us by seizing Tainton's striped Sunday troupoker, raked out the
fire
sers as a poker-holder, thus seat.
He
left
burning a large and smouldering hole
in the
us in the darkness and Tainton lay awake until the small
hours, grinding his teeth and swearing a hideous revenge.
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
252
In fifteen years you canter through evolution, dash through history,
covering the development of man from anthropoid ape to medieval in the course of a
bikkipeg and had
few birthdays.
its
The
nappy changed
child has
no sooner
a couple of times before
monk
finished it
seems
its
to
be standing up in the school debating society, proposing that, "This House Sees No Alternative to the Economics of the Market Place," or writing essays
on "The
Politics of
Feminism."
We
Third World Republics, granted Constitutions and
are Bills
all like
insecure
of Rights before
we have banished tribalism, given up eating our enemies or produced Budgets planned on the signs of the zodiac. Ideas are clapped on us as top hats were once set on the grizzled heads of African chieftains; they make us all look more or less ridiculous. I read to find new characters to adopt on lonely runs round the periphery of football pitches.
I
read aloud to entertain
my
father
and
when we had got through Shakespeare's sonnets. Browning and A Shropshire Lad, we went on to Fragments of an Agon and Sweeney Among the added Murder in the Cathedral (the truncated version) to Ivor Novello's Glamorous Nights as another play suitable for solo performance on the dining-room stairs. We went, after a prolonged dinner at the Trocadero, to see an Auden and Isherwood verse drama, it must have been The Ascent of ¥.6, at the Mercury Theatre, and what enter-
Nightingales.
my
I
most about the evening was the presence among the incidental musicians of a lady drummer called "Eve Kish." Eve Kish became a subject of his sudden gusts of uncontrollable laughter; he would imagine her patrolling the country lanes with her kettledrum, and he would look in the programmes of all other plays to see if he could find the longed-for announcement "Percussion: Eve Kish." I remember him sitting down a quarter of an hour late at The Seagull, calling out loudly, "What? No Eve Kish on the drum?" In spite of this unpromising beginning it would be hard to overestimate the effect Auden had on me and my generation of middle-class schoolboys. He wrote about what we understood: juvenile jokes about housemasters, homosexual longings, the Clever Boy, the Form Entertainer and the Show Off. And yet his poems brought extraordinary news of a world outside the stuffy common-room and the headmaster's study; the vague but heroic struggle to do great things which were also stylized and in capital letters, like Building the Just City. We had been so near a war: I was born less than five years after the Great War ended, and we had grown up with Flanders poppies and pictures of tin hats on innumerable war graves and I knew a boy whose father promised to tell him about the horrors of Passchendaele if he went straight to bed. Now another war was coming so that we too, I sometimes thought with acute tained
father
John Mortimer
253
remembered only by an embarrassed silence on a soggy school playing-field on Poppy Day. All the same, the idea of the new war was a different and clear one. The gloomy ex-jockey who drove my father's car in the country had told depression, would end as being
me
about
dropping their Abyssinian prisoners-of-war out prep school I turned over pages of the Illustrated
Italian Fascists
of aeroplanes. At
my
London News and saw photographs of Spanish villages shattered by German bombs. There were pictures of young Republican militiamen, going up to the front grinning and sucking cigarette-stubs ready to fight a new and unmistakably evil military machine. They had, moreover, the poets on their side, whereas the Fascists were supported by people like Keswick. I knew almost nothing about life, but I knew perfectly clearly that I couldn't stand people like Keswick. So a whole political attitude can grow from a handful of books and a strong loathing for the Head of the House. Naive I
as these beliefs were, trivial as their origins
cannot say they are attitudes
me
that those
who now
I
have ever
been,
and it seems to denouncing the treacher-
lived to regret,
write their best-sellers
ous iniquities of the Cambridge Communists show
when good and
little
understanding
seemed so unusually distinguish and the Russians appeared simply as allies in the war
of the emotions of the thirties, easy to
may have
evil
against Fascism.
know how the invitation to join the Communist Party came. I know that Esmond Romilly is supposed to have started a network of public school cells, but I can't imagine who can have recommended me don't
I
as a likely candidate.
one-boy communist while
I
When
cell in a
joined
I
I
formed, so
could see, a
received puzzling and contradictory instructions from the Party
When
the Stalin-Hitler pact was signed,
the Russians lost their enthusiasm for the
urged to go I
I
sea of Harrovian capitalist enterprise. For a
Headquarters in King Street.
slow.
far as
down on
couldn't,
I
coming
struggle
and
I
was
and persuade the workers to go about it except put the word around
to the factory floor
thought, do
much
the classroom that Virgil should be translated as lethargically as possible,
which needed no particular encouragement. Later, when Hitler attacked Russia, we were urged to go down on the factory floor and step up production. Again, all I could suggest was the stepping up of the translation of Virgil. After these contradictory commands from King Street I stopped taking the Party's literature and told my friends that the only political views worth having were those of Prince Peter Kropotkin who believed in anarchism. Mutual Aid and the essential goodness of human nature, opinions which were not easy to hold when you were a "go-slow"
sharing a
room with Tainton.
In the flight from Tainton
I
spent
more and more time alone
in the
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
254
high, marmoreal, Victorian library, chasing books in dark corners and
up
step-ladders, finding in
unexpected places
like dictionaries,
medieval
or collections of obscure eighteenth-century poetry,
histories
ideas
which filled me with hilarity, gloom or almost unbearable lust. I found Lord Byron's Turkish slippers in a glass case, and set myself to follow his uneasy pilgrimage round the school, from the tomb of John Peachey where he lay to write poetry, to the grave where his daughter is buried
Harrow Church to teach her a sharp lesson for being illegitimate. Then, as now, I found Lord Byron deeply sympathetic. His potent
outside
mixture of revolutionary fervour and crusty conservatism, his
common
Puritan voluptuary, of a romantic with to
me.
I
of a
sense, was intoxicating
Hock and limping round Newstead Abbey
spent afternoons in the library drinking imaginary
swimming the Hellespont or harem of housemaids. I stayed up
Seltzer,
with a
life
late
gambling with Dallas, and
chamber-pot overflowing with banknotes. Then I read of Byron's Harrow friendships, especially that with Lord Clare. Years after he'd left school, Byron met Clare by chance on the road to Bologna
awoke
to find the
and was deeply moved, ends.
I
Avenue
tried to in
feeling, apparently, his heart beat at his fingers'
imagine a chance encounter with Tainton on Western
twenty years' time and decided that
remain unexcited. Life perhaps, been
all
that
my
in the intervening years for
it
was cracked up •
•
fingers'
ends would
Lord Byron had not,
to be.
•
When
war was declared, when we waited, in that far-off and hazy autumn, for the first attack, Oliver Pensotti and I spent a good deal of our time wondering if we would be slaughtered before we had actually been to bed with any sort of lady. This understandable concern was combined, in Oliver's case, with a deep anxiety as to whether he would ever be able to "take breasts," those additions which he found hugely embarrassing and which distinguished Deanna Durbin from Ryecroft Minor, the school tart, who was readily available for a box of chocolate biscuits.
Meanwhile the whole nation was in readiness for the shock of invasion. Oliver's mother left her flat in Charles Street and went to live in the Dorchester, which was built of concrete and believed to be impregnable to air raids. As humble privates in the Harrow Officers' Training Corps, Oliver and I were sent to Aldershot on manoeuvres organized by the Brigade of Guards. We had chosen a peaceful spot, far away from the action where Tainton, having got hold of a box of flares, was staging his
own "I
display of pyrotechnics
suppose
we'll
be
really
and
doing
setting fire to the undergrowth. this in a
year or two."
John Mortimer
"You may be doing
I'll
it.
255
have a different
sort of job,
you much about it." "That'll make a change. I suppose you mean you'll be Service, because of the languages they know you speak."
Not
that
I
shall
be able to
I
imagine.
tell
"And because of the languages they don't know cause of the languages they know I don't speak."
I
in the Secret
speak.
And
be-
was getting bored with the constant problem of decoding Pensotti. went back to reading A DolVs House, which I had brought with me on I
I
manoeuvres.
"My Ma's
leaving the Dorchester," Oliver surprisingly volunteered
some information. "She's going to America. It's the end of civilization as we know it. Chap in the Government told her that. Civilization as I knew it consisted of Keswick and keeping all your buttons done up for three years and being put to bed by a butler and the "
slow, meaningless translation of Latin poetry. for
its
I
said that
I
couldn't wait
destruction. Oliver got out his wire brushes and, swishing
against the top of his cap, crooned our favourite
them
Deanna Durbin num-
ber:
climb
I love to
An
apple
tree,
Those apples green Are bad
for
me,
They make me It's
A
tall
Guards
foolish but ifs fun!
officer
wearing a white armband rode up to us on a
huge horse. "Bang, bang, you "I
know
that's
chance
fellows!"
he
said.
"You're dead!"
going to happen," Oliver grumbled as
to the riding school to get a
get a real
sick as sick can be,
mug
we went back
of sweet tea, "I shall be dead before
I
to find out about breasts."
The rumblings from Europe grew
Sandy Wilson joined our form and took to knitting long khaki objects, socks, mufflers and Balaclava helmets, comforts for the troops. When our form master protested at this click of needles, which recalled, in a somewhat sinister way, the foot of the guillotine, Sandy Wilson rightly said that it was the patriotic duty of all of us to do our bit for the boys at the front. The future composer of The Boy Friend also organized trips to London to see a play called The Women by Clare Booth Luce which had not a man in the cast. Oliver and I saw it several times. He hired opera-glasses and took a louder.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
256
careful view of the cleavages of the cast, but
seemed
to
come no
nearer
reassurance.
We
practised for air raids, going
down
to the cellars
Me Luck
and wearing
You Wave Me Goodbye on Mr. Lamb's wireless. Our housemaster took a gloomy view of the situation. "War is hell," he said. "I remember the Somme and we never thought we should have to go through that again. Of course we could have nipped this one in the bud, if we'd only fought in Spain. Or our gas masks while Gracie Fields sang Wish
as
even Czechoslovakia."
"You mean,
sir,"
I
asked, intolerably, "that war
Spain or Czechoslovakia?" As a matter of fact entirely,
but
I
had inherited what
my
father
I
is
hell
except in
agreed with Mr.
would
call
Lamb
the art of the
advocate, or the irritating habit of looking for the flaw in any argument. •
•
•
"School songs" were a great and proud feature of Harrow
life.
We
would assemble in the Speech Room and sing the compositions of longdead housemasters and music masters, songs redolent of vanished boys playing cricket in knickerbockers, enjoying romantic friendships on summer evenings and going out to die in Afghanistan or on Majuba Hill: Forty Years On; Jerry a Poor Little Fag; Byron lay, lazily lay, Hid from lesson and game away. Dreaming poetry all alone, Up on the top of Peachey stone. That was the repertoire and then a new boy with a childish treble would pipe. Five hundred faces and Life in front of me,
And
all so strange
home behind
.
.
.
the gravelly-voiced, hairy-chinned, spotty seniors would trumpet in
chorus,
But
the time will
And you
II
come when your
heart will thrill
think with joy of your time on the Hill!
Winston Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty, came down to this strange ceremony which he apparently enjoyed. After the songs were over Mr. Churchill climbed with difficulty on to the stage. He cannot have been more than sixty-five years old, but his ancient head emerged from the carapace of his dinner jacket like the hairless pate of a tortoise, his old hand trembled on the handle of the walking-stick which supported him and his voice, when he spoke, was heavily slurred with brandy and old age. He seemed to us to be about a hundred and three.
John Mortimer "If they ever
"God help
us
put him in charge of the war,
in the
"
I
whispered to Oliver,
all!"
"Oh, they won't do
Chap
257
Government
he assured me. "They'll never do
that,"
that.
my Ma."
told
•
•
•
By the end of a year Mr. Churchill had taken over the Government and began to look much younger. Oliver Pensotti and I met in London one winter evening during the holidays. We went for a drink in the bar of the Normandy Hotel where Oliver got into conversation with an ATS named Jeannie, as the bombs started to fall. The sound of breaking glass, the sweet taste of gin and lime, the peril of arbitrary thuds and the silent presence of the rather chunky Jeannie, who smiled but hardly spoke, added to the excitement of the evening. Months before, a fire-bomb had destroyed the kitchen of my father's flat in the Temple and he now lived all the time in the country, potting up, pricking out, trying to get enough petrol to keep the grass cut and getting up early in the blackout to travel to London to deal with the rising tide of divorce. So we went back to the empty flat and sat among the dust-sheets and the ruins of the kitchen. I found several bottles of port which we drank; descending on a foundation of gin and lime they made the room lurch like a ship at sea. I started to tell Jeannie about Lord Byron and his fatal love for his half-sister, but she was looking at Oliver in a strangely fixed sort of way and whispered words I found extremely enigmatic, "Have you got a rubber?" Almost at once they moved into the bedroom. I was left alone with my memories of his fatal Lordship's love life and pulled down, from my father's dusty shelves, a book of his poems: So, well go
So
no more a roving
late into the night.
Though
the heart be still as loving,
And
moon
the
be
still
as bright.
For the sword outwears
And And And The
its
sheath,
the soul wears out the breast. the heart
must pause
love itself have
rest.
had a momentary fear of my had even begun, my sword being laid
crashes were coming nearer.
roving being put a stop to before
it
to breathe.
I
had worn out anything at all. In due course the happy couple re-emerged and the
to rest before
it
to rejoin her regiment.
ATS went
off
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
258
"Well,"
I
said to Oliver.
"Manage?" "About the "Perfectly
"How on
earth did you manage?"
breasts, of course."
all
right." Oliver gave a smile of satisfied
"You hardly notice them
at all."
achievement.
Jean Kerr TOUJOURS TRISTESSE
After reading I
day
A
Certain Smile by Frangoise Sagan:
was waiting
like
for Banal.
I
was feeling rather bored.
any other, except for the
hail.
I
It
was a summer
crossed the street.
Suddenly I was wildly happy. I had an overwhelming intuition that one day I would be dead. These large eyes, this bony child's body would be consigned to the sweet earth. Everything spoke of it: the lonely cooing of a solitary pigeon overhead, the stately bong bong bong of the cathedral
chimes, the loud horn of the motorbus that grazed I
slipped into the cafe, but Banal was late.
I
my
thigh.
was pleased to notice
annoyed me. Banal and I were classmates. Our eyes had met, our bodies had met, and then someone introduced us. Now he was my property, and I knew every inch of that brown body the way you know your own drivethat that simple fact
way.
A
stranger across the booth spoke.
"Monique, what are you staring at, silly girl?" It was Banal. Curious that I hadn't recognized him. Suddenly I knew why. A revolting look of cheerfulness had twisted and distorted those clear young features until he seemed actually to be smiling. I couldn't look. I turned my head, but his voice followed me, humbly and at a distance, like a spaniel. "Monique, why did you skip class? We were studying the Critique of Pure Reason. It was interesting, but I think Kant offers a false dichotomy. The only viable solution is to provide a synthesis in which experience is impregnated with rationality and reason is ordained to empirical data."
How
like
Banal to say the obvious. Sometimes
as
I
sat
and
lis-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
26o
tened to Banal and his companions trade flippancies,
boredom grow and
me
swell within
almost as
could
I
feel
had swallowed
if I
a
the
beach
ball.
Why must we chatter fruitlessly and endlessly about philosophy and politics? confess that I am only interested in questions that touch the I
heart of another
human
being
— "Who are you sleeping with?"; "What do
from acid indigesHon?" Banal's voice droned on like a chorus of cicadas on
you take
for quick relief
finally there
was a statement
"Monique,
want you
I
I
a hot day until
couldn't ignore.
to
meet
my
My
grandfather, Anatole.
rich
grandfather.
A
slight,
aged, but
liked that.
I
man came
stooped I
was so
He was no
toward me.
tired of these eager
longer middle-
boys of
fifty.
His hair,
which was greenish white, might have been unpleasant had there been more of it. As he smiled gently, showing his small, even, ecru teeth, I thought, "Ah, he's the type that's read that he'd had
But now,
him
mad
for little girls." In fact, hadn't
some trouble with the
police?
as his dull eyes looked directly into
match on the tablecloth, of joy that finally I had met a man who was And yet, I reminded myself firmly as this
idly striking a
won't
last. It
Now
can't
last.
He
Banal was speaking
I
mine and
realized with a
as
bored as
my
heart
I
noticed
sudden stab
was.
back to earth,
slid
in his infantile
way. "
sitting beside
him
hadn't noticed her because she was wearing a brown dress and
I
blended into the back of the booth. Her voice was warm,
"Why,
that's
won't be able to is
come because
little
chateau by the ocean.
I
I'm redecorating the town house. But
plenty of food in the Frigidaire, and
Monique
the ocean from the bedroom. Here are the keys. I
like a caress.
awful that this poor child has never seen the sea.
Anatole, darling, you must take her to our
there
I
won't always be this bored.
"Do you know Monique has never seen the sea? Then a woman spoke, Anatole's wife. She was but
I
will
be able to see
"
liked her for that.
Then
they were leaving. Dorette, for that was Anatole's wife's
name, had forgotten her gloves, and I admit I felt a pang of jealousy as I noticed the intimate way that Anatole threw them to her. Now Banal and I were alone. As I suspected. Banal was stormy and full of suspicion. How I hated him when he got this way. He kept asking me, again and again, "Are you sure, Monique, are you really sure that you have never seen the sea?" But when I assured him, what was the truth, that I never had, he
Jean Kerr
261
seemed comforted and became once more the sunny, young man I found so repellent.
We
were
open
in Anatole's
smiling,
handsome
Overhead the sky was blue
car.
as a
bruise.
The gleaming white road a ribbon of cotton candy.
my
As
under our wheels seemed like realized we were nearing the chateau,
slipping
I
heart turned over once, quickly and neatly, like a pancake on a
griddle.
Anatole's voice
seemed
to
come from
a great distance.
"Bored, darling?" I
turned to him.
"Of course
— and you?"
His answering smile told
me
that
And now we were running up hand
hand
in
he was.
the long flight of steps to the chateau
two happy children, stopping only when Anatole had
like
to recover his wind.
At the doorway he paused and gathered
when he I
His voice,
spoke, was like a melody played sweetly and in tune.
"My far as
me into his arms.
he said, "I hope I have made it perfectly clear that so concerned you are just another pickup."
darling,"
am
"Of course,"
I
whispered.
How adult he was,
and how indescribably
dear.
So the golden days passed. Mostly we were silent, but occasionally we sat in the twilight and spoke wistfully of Dorette and Banal and what suckers they were.
And who could with Banal had
felt
I
describe those nights? Never in
anything
like this.
my
Ah, how rewarding
relationship it is
to share
the bed of a really mature man. For one thing, there was the clatter and
the excitement four times a night as he leaped to the floor and stamped
on
his feet in
for
him, now, was Thumper.
The for
me
through
last
an
effort to get the circulation going.
day dawned cold and bright
out in the car, so
my
What
curls,
shall
we were, both
I
I
packed
my
as a star.
My
little
pet
name
Anatole was waiting
few belongings, ran a
nail file
and joined him. say of the pain of that ride back to Paris? In
of us, precisely as weary as ever. Yet for the
one sense, first
time
it
wasn't a shared weariness.
We pulled up to my front door, "Monique," he
said, "little
and then the blow fell. one. I have been bored with you. No-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
262
body can take that away from us. But the truth my will hurt you, I am even more bored with
is,
and
I
know how
wife. I'm going
this
back to
her."
He was had loved I
knew
I
a
gone.
man.
I
It
was alone. Alone, alone, alone. I was a woman who was a simple story, prosaic even. And yet somehow
could get a novel out of
it.
Truman Capote WORK
A DAY'S
A
Scene: in
New
rainy April morning, 1979.
am
/
walking along Second Avenue
York City, carrying an oilcloth shopping satchel bulging with
house-cleaning materials that belong to Mary Sanchez,
an umbrella above the pair of us, which much taller than I am, a six-footer.
trying to keep
she
is
Mary Sanchez
is
who is
beside
me
not difficult as
woman who
a professional cleaning
is
works by the
hour, at five dollars an hour, six days a week. She works approximately
nine hours a day, and
between
visits
Monday and
on the average twenty-four different domiciles
Saturday: generally her customers require her
ser-
once a week.
vices just
Mary is fifty-seven years old, a native of a small South Carolina town who has "lived North" the past forty years. Her husband, a Puerto Rican, died last summer. She has a married daughter who lives in San Diego, and three sons, one of whom is a dentist, one who is serving a tenyear sentence for armed robbery, a third who is "just gone, God knows where.
He
called
me
last
Christmas, he sounded far away.
are you, Pete, but he wouldn't say, so
him
told
I
his
I
hung up
and
the phone, slam,
I
asked where
daddy was dead, and
he said good, said that was the best Christmas present
him, so
I
I
could've given
hope he never
calls again.
Spitting on Dad's grave that way. Well, sure, Pedro was never good to the kids.
Or me.
Just boozed
and
rolled dice.
They found him dead on a bench
Ran around
in Central Park.
with bad women.
Had
empty
a mostly
bottle of Jack Daniel's in a paper sack propped between his legs; never
drank nothing but the
best, that
man.
saying he was glad his father was dead. he?
And
I
owed Pedro something
Pete was way out of line,
He owed him
too. If it
ignorant Baptist, lost to the Lord. But the Catholic church,
Still,
the gift of life, didn't
wasn't for him, I'd
when
I
got married,
and the Catholic church brought
I
still
be an
married in
a shine to
my
life
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
264
that has never
gone out, and never
children in the Faith; two of
will,
not even when
them turned out
fine,
and
I die. I I
raised
my
give the church
more than me." Mary Sanchez is muscular, but she has a pale round smooth pleasant with a tiny upturned nose and a beauty mole high on her left cheek.
credit for that
face
She
A
dislikes the term "black," racially applied.
light-brown colored
woman. And
III tell
"Vm
not black.
you something
Vm
brown.
dont Maybe
else. I
know many other colored people that like being called blacks. some of the young people. And those radicals. But not folks my age, or even half as old. Even people who really are black, they dont like it. What's wrong with Negroes? Vm a Negro, and a Catholic, and proud to say it."
Vve known Mary Sanchez since 1968, and she has worked for me, periodically, all these years. She is conscientious, and takes far more than a casual interest in her clients,
not met at
who
many of whom
she has scarcely met, or
many of them are unmanied working men and women home when she arrives to clean their apartments; she
all, for
are not at
communicates with them, and they with her, via notes: ''Mary, please water the geraniums and feed the cat. Hope this finds you well. Gloria Scotto."
Once I suggested
to her that I
would
like to follow her
around during
and she said well, she didnt see anything wrong would enjoy the company: "This can be kind of
the course of a day's work,
with that, and in
fact,
lonely work sometimes."
how we happen morning. Were off to
Which ery April
is
on East Seventy-third TC:
What
her
walking along together on this show-
first job:
a Mr.
Andrew
Trask,
who
lives
Street.
the hell have you got in this sack?
MARY: Here, give TC:
to be
it
No. Sorry. But
MARY: Maybe
it's
to it's
me.
I
can't have
you cursing.
heavy.
the iron.
You iron their clothes? You never iron any of mine. MARY: Some of these people just have no equipment. That's why TC:
to carry so
Seems
much.
like all
my
I
I
have
leave notes: get this, get that. But they forget.
people are bound up in their troubles. Like
this
had him seven, eight months, and I've never seen him yet. But he drinks too much, and his wife left him on account of it, and he owes bills everywhere, and if ever I answered his phone, it's somebody trying to collect. Only now Mr. Trask, where we're going.
they've turned off his phone.
I've
Truman Capote (We
TC
and she produces from a shoulder-satchel a jangling with dozens of keys. The building is a four-
arrive at the address,
massive metal ring story
265
brownstone with a midget elevator.)
{after entering
and glancing around
the Trask establishment
— one
fair-
room with greenish arsenic-colored walls, a kitchenette, and a bathroom with a broken, constantly flowing toilet): Hmm. I see what you mean. This guy has problems. MARY {opening a closet crammed and clammy with sweat-sour laundry): Not a clean sheet in the house! And look at that bed! Mayonnaise! Chocolate! Crumbs, crumbs, chewing gum, cigarette butts. Lipstick! What kind of woman would subject herself to a bed like that? I haven't been able to change the sheets for weeks. Months. sized
{She turns on several lamps with awry shades;
organize the surrounding disorder, ises.
Really,
who had
it
I
and while she
labors to
take more careful note of the prem-
looks as though a burglar
had been plundering
there,
one
some drawers of a bureau open, others closed. There's a leather-framed photograph on the bureau of a stocky swarthy macho man and a blond hoity-toity Junior League woman and three tow-headed grinning snaggle-toothed suntanned boys, the eldest about fourteen. There is another unframed picture stuck in a blurry mirror: another blonde, but perhaps a pickup from Maxwells Plum; I definitely not Junior League imagine it is her lipstick on the bed sheets. A copy of the December issue of True Detective magazine is lying on the floor, and in the bathroom, left
—
stacked by the ceaselessly churning
toilet,
stands a pile of girlie literature
— Penthouse, Hustler, Oui; otherwise, seems be a absence But hundreds of empty vodka of cultural everywhere — the miniature kind served by there
possessions.
to
there are
total
bottles
airlines.)
TC:
Why do you
suppose he drinks only these miniatures?
MARY: Maybe he can't afford nothing bigger. Just buys what he can. He has a good job, if he can hold on to it, but I guess his family keeps
him TC:
What
broke.
does he do?
MARY: Airplanes.
That explains it. He gets these MARY: Yeah? How come? He's not TC: Oh, my God. TC:
little
bottles free.
a steward. He's a pilot.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
266
(A telephone rings, a subdued noise, for the instrument
is
submerged
under a rumpled blanket. Scowling, her hands soapy with dishwater, Mary unearths
MARY:
with the finesse of an archeologist.)
it
He must have
got connected again. Hello? (Silence) Hello?
A woman's VOICE: Who is this? MARY: This is Mr. Trask's residence. woman's VOICE: Mr. Trask's residence? [Laughter; then,
whom am
I
hoity-toity)
To
speaking?
Mr. Trask's maid. woman's VOICE: So Mr. Trask has a maid, has he? Well, that's more than Mrs. Trask has. Will Mr. Trask's maid please tell Mr. Trask that Mrs. Trask would like to speak to him? MARY: This
is
MARY: He's not home. MRS. TRASK: Don't give
MARY: I'm
me
sorry, Mrs. Trask.
MRS. TRASK {bitter mirth):
MARY: What
I
mean
is,
him he comes
MRS. TRASK: Tell instant
MARY: Yes, ma'am.
No wonder I
that.
wonder
if
I'll
I
Out
Put him on.
guess he's out flying. flying? He's always flying, dear. Always.
he's at work. to call in, if
me
at
my
sister's in
he knows what's good
for
Jersey. Call the
him.
leave that message. {She hangs up)
he's in the condition he's in.
he
New
left
And now
me my money. Uh-huh.
That's
Mean woman.
he's out of a job. it.
On
top of the
fridge.
{Amazingly, an hour or so afterward she has managed to somewhat cam-
and has the room looking not altogether shipshape but reasonably respectable. With a pencil, she scribbles a note and props it against the bureau mirror: "Dear Mr. Trask yr. wive want you fone her at her sistar place sinsirly Mary Sanchez." Then she sighs and perches on the edge of the bed and from her satchel takes out a small tin box containing an assortment of roaches; selecting one, she fits it into a roach-holder and lights up, dragging deeply, holding the smoke down in her lungs and ouflage the chaos
closing her eyes. She offers
TC:
Thanks.
MARY:
It's
It's
me
a toke.)
too early.
never too
early.
Anyway, you ought
to try this stuff.
Mucho
from a customer, a real fine Catholic lady; she's married to a fellow from Peru. His family sends it to them. Sends it right through the mail. I never use it so's to get high. Just enough to lift the uglies a little. That heaviness. {She sucks on the roach until it all but burns her lips) Andrew Trask. Poor scared devil. He
cojones.
I
get
it
Truman Capote could end up
like
267
Dead on a park bench, nobody caring. none for that man. Lately, I find myself
Pedro.
Not that I didn't care remembering the good times with Pedro, and I guess that's what happens to most people if ever they've once loved somebody and lose them; the bad slips away, and you linger on the nice things about them, what made you like them in the first place. Pedro, the young man I fell in love with, he was a beautiful dancer, oh he could tango, oh he could rumba, he taught me to dance and danced me off my feet. We were regulars at the old Savoy Ballroom. He was clean, neat even when the drink got to him his fingernails were always trimmed and polished. And he could cook up a storm.
—
That's
how he made
a living, as a short-order cook.
I
said
he never
did anything good for the children; well, he fixed their lunch-boxes
wrapped in wax paper. Ham, peanut butter and jelly, egg salad, tuna fish, and fruit, apples, bananas, pears, and a thermos filled with warm milk mixed with honey. It hurts now to think of him there in the park, and how I to take to school. All kinds of sandwiches
didn't cry cry.
I
when
came to tell me about it; how I never did owed him that. I owed him a sock in the jaw,
the police
ought to have.
I
too.
I'm going to leave the lights on for Mr. Trask.
him come home
to a dark
No sense letting
room.
{When we emerged from the brownstone the rain had stopped, but the sky was sloppy and a wind had risen that whipped trash along the gutters and caused passers-by to clutch their hats.
Our
destination was four blocks
away, a modest but modern apartment house with a uniformed doorman, the address of Miss Edith Shaw, a
was on the
young woman
editorial staff of a magazine.
in her mid-twenties
"Some kind of news magazine.
She must have a thousand books. But she doesnt look
like
no bookworm.
of boyfriends. Too many just cant seem to stay very long with one fellow. We got to be close
She's a very healthy kind of girl,
—
who
and she has
came
lots
and she was sick as a cat. She'd come from having a baby murdered. Normally I don't hold with that; it's against my beliefs. And I said why didn't you marry this man? The truth was, she didn't know who to marry; she didn't know who the dad was. And anyway, the last thing she wanted was a husband or a because
.
.
.
Well, one time
I
to her place
baby.")
MARY
{surveying the scene from the opened front door of Miss Shaw's two-
room apartment): Nothing much
to
do here.
A
little
dusting.
She
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
268
takes
good care of
floor,
nothing but
it
Look
herself.
those books. Ceiling to
at all
library.
{Except for the burdened bookshelves, the apartment was attractively
Scandinavianly white and gleaming. There was one antique: an old
spare,
on it; a sheet of paper was glanced at what was written on it: "Zsa Zsa Gabor is
roll-top desk with a typewriter
machine; and
I
rolled into the
305 years old I
know
Because
And
I
counted
Her Rings" below that, was typed:
triple-spaced
"Sylvia Plath,
And
your
Vm glad,
hate you
I
damn
daddy.
do you
hear,
Glad you stuck your head In a gas-hot oven!"
TC:
Miss
Is
Shaw
a poet?
MARY: She's always writing something. see,
sounds
like she's
on dope
to
I
don't
me.
know what
Come
here,
I
it
is.
want
Stuff to
I
show
you something.
{She leads ber.
me
into the bathroom, a surprisingly large
and sparkling cham-
She opens a cabinet door and points at an object on a shelf a pink
plastic vibrator
molded
Know what TC: Don't
that
in the shape of an average-sized penis.)
is?
you?
MARY: I'm the one asking. TC:
It's
a dildo vibrator.
know what a vibrator is. But I never saw one like that. It "Made in Japan." TC: Ah, well. The Oriental mind. MARY: Heathens. She's sure got some lovely perfumes. If you like fume. Me, I only put a little vanilla behind my ears. MARY:
I
{Now Mary began
to work,
mopping
per-
waxed carpetless floors, flicking and while she worked she kept her
the
the bookshelves with a feather duster;
says
Truman Capote
269
and her roach-holder filled. I don't know how much "heavshe had to lift, but the aroma alone was lofting me.)
roach-box open iness"
MARY: You sure you don't want to something. TC:
You
twisted
{Man and
my
try a
couple of tokes? You're missing
arm.
some powerful grass, never enough to have acquired a habit, but enough to judge quality and know the difference between ordinary Mexican weed and luxurious contraband like Thai-sticks and the supreme Maui-Wowee. But after smoking the whole of one of Mary's roaches, and while halfway through another, I felt as though seized by a delicious demon, embraced by a mad marvelous merriment: the
demon
boy, Vve dragged
tickled
my
toes, scratched
my
itchy head, kissed
red sugary lips, shoved his fiery tongue kled;
my
eyes were like
highest shelves:
Eimi by
e.e.
zoom
lenses; I
The Neurotic
down my
throat.
could read the
Personality of
me
hotly with his
Everything sparof books on the by Karen Horney;
titles
Our Time
cummings; Four Quartets; The Collected Poems of Robert
Frost.)
TC:
I
despise Robert Frost.
MARY: Now, TC:
Him
if
He was an
evil, selfish
we're going to curse
with his halo of shaggy hair.
sadist.
bastard.
He wrecked
you ever discussed
his this
whole
An
family.
egomaniacal double-crossing
Some
of them. Mary, have
with your confessor?
MARY: Father McHale? Discussed what? TC:
The
precious nectar we're so divinely devouring,
adee.
Have you informed Father McHale of
my
adorable chick-
this delectable enter-
prise?
MARY: What he don't know won't hurt him. Here, have a Life Saver. Peppermint.
It
makes
that stuff taste better.
{Odd, she didnt seem high, not a jolly old Jupiter,
tance. it
bit.
Vd
beckoned beyond in the
Mary marched over
just passed
Venus, and
lilac star-dazzled
to the telephone
Jupiter,
planetary dis-
and dialed a number; she
let
ring a long while before hanging up.)
MARY: Not home. That's one thing to be grateful for. Mr. and Mrs. Berkowitz. If they'd been home, I couldn't have took you over there.
On
account of they're these
you know how
stuffy they are!
real stuffy
Jewish people.
And
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
270 TC: Jewish people?
Museum
Gosh,
Very
yes.
stuffy.
They
all
ought to be in the
of Natural History. All of them.
been thinking about giving Mrs. Berkowitz notice. The trouble is, Mr. Berkowitz, he was in garments, he's retired, and the two of them are always home. Underfoot. Unless they drive up to Greenwich, where they got some property. That's where they must have gone today. Another reason I'd like to quit them. They've got an old parrot makes a mess everywhere. And stupid! All that dumb parrot can say is two things: "Holy cow!" and "Oy vey!" Every time you walk in the house it starts shouting "Oy vey!" Gets on my
MARY:
I've
—
nerves something terrible.
and blow
How
about
it?
Let's toke
another roach
this joint.
{The rain had returned and the wind increased, a mixture that
made
the
The Berkowitzes lived on Park Avenue in the upper Eighties, and I suggested we take a taxi, but Mary said no, what kind of sissy was I, we can walk it, so I realized that despite appearances, she, too, was traveling stellar paths. We walked along slowly, as though it were a warm tranquil day with turquoise skies, and the hard slippery streets ribbons of pearl-colored Caribbean beach. Park Avenue is air look like a shattering mirror.
not
my
favorite boulevard;
were to plant
Harlem,
it
it
with tulips
would be of no
prompt memories. can
woman
We
it is
rich
all the
with lack of charm;
if
Mrs. Lasker
way from Grand Central
Spanish
to
avail. Still, there are certain buildings that
passed a building where Willa Cather, the Ameri-
most admired, lived the
writer Vve
her companion, Edith Lewis;
I
last years
of her
with
life
often sat in front of their fireplace
drank Bristol Cream and observed the
and
enflame the pale
prairie-
blue of Miss Cather s serene genius-eyes. At Eighty-fourth Street
I recog-
nized an apartment house where
I
firelight
had once attended
a small black-tie
dinner given by Senator and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, then so young and insouciant.
But despite
not as enlightening as
dismissed and the
I
men
the agreeable efforts of our hosts, the evening was
had anticipated, because after the ladies had been left in the dining room to savor their cordials and
one of the guests, a rather slope-chinned dressmaker named Oleg Cassini, overwhelmed the conversation with a travelogue account of
Havana
cigars,
Las Vegas and the myriad showgirls hed recently auditioned there: their measurements, erotic accomplishments, financial requirements a recital that hypnotized its auditors, none of whom was more chucklingly atten-
—
tive
than the future President.
When we
reach Eighty-seventh Street,
fourth floor at 1060 Park Avenue,
I
point out a
window on
and inform Mary: "My mother
the
lived
Truman Capote
271
That was her bedroom. She was beautiful and very intelligent, but at least she thought she she didnt want to live. She had many reasons did. But in the end it was just her husband, my stepfather. He was a selfmade man, fairly successful she worshipped him, and he really was a nice guy, but he gambled, got into trouble and embezzled a lot of money, there.
—
—
and
lost his
business and was headed for Sing Sing."
Mary shakes her
head: "Just like
my
boy.
Same
as him."
We're both standing staring at the window, the downpour drenching
up and gave a dinner party; everybody said she looked lovely. But after the party, before she went to bed, she took thirty Seconals and she never woke up." Mary is angry; she strides rapidly away through the rain: "She had no right to do that. I dont hold with that. Ifs against my beliefs.") us.
"So one night she got
all dressed
SQUAWKING PARROT: Holy COw! MARY: Hear that? What did I tell you? PARROT:
Oy
veyl
Oy
vey!
{The parrot, a surrealist collage of green and yellow and orange moulting feathers, is ensconced on a mahogany perch in the relentlessly formal
and Mrs. Berkowitz, a room suggesting that it had been made of mahogany: the parquet floors, the wall paneling, and the
parlor of Mr. entirely
furniture, all of it costly reproductions of grandiose period-piece furniture
— though
God knows what
perhaps early Grand Concourse.
period,
Straight-back chairs; settees that would have tested the endurance of a
posture professor. Mulberry velvet draperies swathed the windows, which
were incongruously covered with mustard-brown Venetian blinds. Above a
mahogany mantelpiece a mahogany -framed portrait of a jowly, sallow-skinned Mr. Berkowitz depicted him as a country squire outfitted carved
for a fox
hunt: scarlet coat,
silk cravat, a
riding crop under the other.
rambling abode looked
I
bugle tucked under one arm, a
dont know what
like, for I
never saw any of it except the kitchen.)
MARY: What's so funny? What you laughing TC: Nothing.
Berkowitz
PARROT:
Oy
just this
It's
veyl
is
Now,
if
at?
Peruvian tobacco,
my
cherub.
I
take
it
Mr.
an equestrian?
Oy
vey!
MARY: Shut up! Before TC:
the remainder of this
I
damn
wring your
we're going to curse
Does the critter have a name? MARY: Uh-huh. Try and guess.
.
.
.
neck.
(Mary mumbles; crosses
herself)
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
272 TC: Polly.
MARY TC:
{truly surprised):
So
How'd you know
that?
she's a female.
MARY: That's a
name, so she must be a look at all that crap on the
girl's
a bitch. Just
girl.
Whatever she
floor. All for
me
is,
she's
to clean
it
up. TC:
Language, language.
POLLY: Holy cow!
My
Maybe we
{Out comes the tin box, the roaches, the roach-holder, matches) And let's see what we can locate in the kitchen. I'm feeling real munchie.
MARY:
nerves.
better have a
{The interior of the Berkowitz refrigerator
is
little lift.
a gluttons fantasy, a cornu-
copia of fattening goodies. Small wonder the master of the house has such jowls.
"Oh
yes," confirms
Mary, "they're both hogs. Her stomach. She
looks like shes about to drop the
Dionne quintuplets. And
are tailor-made: nothing store-bought could
fit
him.
all his suits
Hmm, yummy,
sure do feel munchie. Those coconut cupcakes look desirable.
mocha
cake,
cream on
wouldnt mind
I
it."
a
Huge soup bowls
hunk of
that.
are found,
We
could
And
I
that
dump some
ice
and Mary masses them with
cupcakes and mocha cake and fist-sized scoops of pistachio ice cream. We return to the parlor with this banquet and fall upon it like abused orphans.
grow an appetite. After finishing off the first helping, and fueling ourselves with more roaches, Mary refills the bowls
There's nothing like grass to
with even heftier portions.)
MARY: TC:
I
How you
feel
feel?
good.
MARY: How good? TC: Real good. MARY: Tell
me
exactly
how you
feel.
TC: I'm in Australia.
MARY: Ever been to Austria?
No, but that's where I am now. And everybody always said what a dull place it is. Shows what they know! Greatest surfing in the world. I'm out in the ocean on a surfboard riding a wave high as a, as a MARY: High as you. Ha-ha. TC: It's made of melting emeralds. The wave. The sun is hot on my back, and the spray is salting my face, and there are hungry sharks all around me. Blue Water, White Death. Wasn't that a terrific movie?
TC:
Not
Austria. Australia.
Truman Capote
273
Hungry white man-eaters everywhere, but they frankly,
MARY
{eyes
I
don't give a fuck
wide with
fear):
You'll be crippled for
.
.
Watch life.
don't worry
me
.
They got killer teeth. be begging on street corners.
for the sharks!
You'll
TC: Music!
MARY: Music! That's the
ticket.
{She weaves like a groggy wrestler toward a gargoyle object that had heretofore
happily escaped
my
attention: a
mahogany console combining
tele-
phonograph, and a radio. She fiddles with the radio until she finds
vision,
a station booming music with a Latin beat.
Her hips maneuver, her abandoned, as
if recalling a
fingers snap, she
is
elegant yet smoothly
sensuous youthful night, and dancing with a
phantom partner some remembered choreography. And it is magic, how her now-ageless body responds to the drums and guitars, contours itself to the subtlest rhythm: she
is
in a trance, the state of grace saints supposedly
when experiencing visions. And speeding through me like amphetamine
achieve
I
am
hearing the music, too;
— each note ringing with the
it is
sep-
on a silent winter Sunday. I move toward her, and into her arms, and we match each other step for step, laughing, undulating, and even when the music is interrupted by an
arate clarity of cathedral chimings
announcer speaking Spanish
as rapid as the rattle of castanets,
we con-
we are locked in our laughter, our embrace: louder and louder, so loud that we are unaware of a key clicking, a door opening and shutting. But the parrot tinue dancing, for the guitars are locked in our heads now, as
hears
it.)
POLLY: Holy cow!
woman's VOICE: What POLLY:
Oy
veyl
Oy
is
this?
What's happening here?
vey!
MARY: Why, hello there, Mrs. Berkowitz. Mr. Berkowitz.
How ya doin'?
Mickey and Minnie Mouse balloons in a Macys Thanksgiving Day parade. Not that there's anything mousey about this twosome. Their infuriated eyes, hers hot behind harlequin spectacles with sequined frames, absorb the scene: our naughty ice-
{And
there they are, hovering in view like the
cream mustaches, the pungent roach smoke polluting the premises. Mr. Berkowitz stalks over and stops the radio.) MRS. BERKOWITZ:
MARY:
I
Who is
din't think
this
man?
you was home.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
274
MRS. BERKOWITZ: Obviously.
asked you:
Who
man?
this
is
me
mine. Helping
just a friend of
MARY: He's
I
out.
I
much work
got so
today.
MR. BERKOWITZ: You're drunk, woman.
MARY
{deceptively sweet):
MRS. BERKOWITZ:
He
How's that you say?
said you're drunk. I'm shocked. Truly,
what I have truly to say to you is: today I'm giving you notice. is my last day of playing nigger around here MRS. BERKOWITZ: You are giving me notice? MR. BERKOWITZ: Get out of here! Before we call the police. MARY: Since we're speaking
truly,
—
{Without ado, we gather our belongings. Mary waves at the parrot: "So long, Polly. You re okay. You're good girl. I was only kidding." And at the front door, where her former employers have sternly stationed themselves,
she announces: "Just for the record, Vve never touched a drop in
Downstairs, the rain
going.
is still
We
my
life."
trudge along Park Avenue,
then cut across to Lexington.)
MARY: Didn't TC:
Belong
I
in a
you they were
tell
stuffy?
museum.
{But most of our buoyancy has departed; the power of the Peruvian foliage recedes, a
now would
sighted
MARY:
I still
don't
me
TC: Let
MARY:
letdown has
I
set in,
my
surfboard
is
sinking,
and any sharks
scare the piss out of me.)
got Mrs. Kronkite to do. But she's nice; she'll forgive
come
till
tomorrow. Maybe
I'll
me
if I
head on home.
catch you a cab.
hate to give
coloreds.
them my
Even when
subway down here
at
business.
Those
taxi
they're colored themselves.
Lex and
people don't
No,
I
like
can get the
Eighty-sixth.
apartment near Yankee Stadium; she says it was cramped when she had a family living with her, but now that shes by herself, it seems immense and dangerous: "Vve got three locks on every {Mary
lives in a rent-controlled
and all the windows are nailed down. Vd buy me a police dog if it didnt mean leaving him by himself so much. I know what it is to be alone, and I wouldn't wish it on a dog.") door,
TC: Please,
Mary,
let
me
MARY: The subway's a It's
just
treat
you
lot quicker.
down here
a ways.
to a taxi.
But
there's
someplace
I
want
to stop.
Truman Capote
{The place
is
275
a narrow church pinched between broad buildings on a side
two brief rows of pews, and a small altar with a plaster figure of a crucified ]esus suspended above it. An odor of incense and candle wax dominates the gloom. At the altar a woman is lighting a street. Inside, there are
candle,
its
the only supplicants present.
the satchel extra" to
Mary produces
— one
handle
we are pew, and from
light fluttering like the sleep of a fitful spirit; otherwise,
it,
We
kneel together in the last
a pair of rosary beads
for herself, the other for
—
always carry a couple
dont know quite how Mary's lips move whisperingly .)
me, though
never having used one before.
"I I
MARY: Dear Lord, in your mercy. Please, Lord, help Mr. Trask to stop boozing and get his job back. Please, Lord, don't leave Miss Shaw a bookworm and an old maid; she ought to bring your children into this world. And, Lord, I beg you to remember my sons and daugh-
and my grandchildren, each and every one. And please don't let Mr. Smith's family send him to that retirement home; he don't want to go, he cries all the time ter
.
.
.
of names is more numerous than the beads on her rosary, and her requests in their behalf have the earnest shine of the altars candle-flame. {Her
list
She pauses
to glance at me.)
MARY: Are you praying? TC: Yes.
MARY:
I
can't hear you.
TC: I'm praying for you,
Mary.
I
want you
to live forever.
MARY: Don't pray for me. I'm already saved. {She takes my hand and holds it) Pray for your mother. Pray for all those souls lost out there in the dark. Pedro. Pedro.
Terry Southern AM MIKE HAMMER
I
One
spring evening ten years or so ago
table, outside the
I
found myself sharing a large
Cafe Flore, with several people who had
the premiere of Serge Lifar's ballet, Lucifer.
One
just
attended
of the persons at the
was Jean-Paul Sartre, and another was a young American cutiewho was getting far more attention than she deserved. The darling
table pie,
emboldened perhaps no less by Pernod than by the saucy pertness of her cashmered bosom which not even the great philosopher could have failed to discern had the audacity to ask: "Monsieur Sartre, have you ever considered writing a ballet?" Out of politeness, no doubt, he replied with a smile and a simple "Non." And that might well have been that except for a fantasy which appealed to me later, in the secrecy of
girl,
—
—
—
my
private night.
think
I
it
was the very blandness of
his reply that
prompted it; in any case, I imagined that Sartre had, in fact, gone mad, had written a ballet and then, despite his lack of formal training, his unwieldy girth, and the wise counsel of friends, he had insisted on danc-
—
ing the leading role himself.
turnip-man
as a giant
rather
common
The
— heavy garb — gravely
idea of Sartre
in close-fitting ballet
glasses, as stout
dancing to
schmaltzy music, or whirling dervishlike to some kind of
weird electronics, was
irresistible.
I
pursued
this fantasy
down many
avenues: First, the incredible frown of consternation on the faces of those receiving invitations to the premiere of this ballet "To be
by the Author Himself!"
Then
Danced
in the dress circle, his distinguished col-
leagues from the great universities, muttering, "Mais cest un vrai scandale!"
And
finally
Cocteau, Malraux .
.
."? Fantastic.
position to
do
the intermission; what would they say
— something
And
like
"//
yet the cold reality
precisely that.
No
— Camus,
ne danse pas mal, Jean-Paul is
that Sartre was, in fact, in a
impresario in Paris would have refused;
Terry Southern
277
had they even hesitated he could have hired the theatre and staged the thing himself to an S.R.O. house. All that was necessary for him to have done this was that he go slightly off his rocker but, of course, this never
—
occurred. Well, this old fantasy
— which over the years an increasing number
of skeptics and unimaginative sorts had pooh-poohed as being "far-
— received a tremendous boost
fetched" I
in vividness the other
day when
learned that Mickey Spillane had decided that he himself would play
the role of
Mike Hammer
in the film version of his novel,
The Girl
Hunters.
Mickey
been
Spillane's literary status has never
America. Hard-core quality-Lit. buffs, however,
fully defined in
will
recall
how he
smashed
into international prominence, in 1947, by concluding his
novel,
The
J,
manner which made Malaparte, Celine and other roman noir look like a bunch of pansies:
Jury, in a
high priests of the
The
first
roar of the .45 shook the room, Charlotte staggered back a step.
symphony of incredulity, an unbelieving witness to truth. Slowly, she looked down at the ugly swelling in her naked belly where the bullet went in. A thin trickle of blood welled out. Her eyes had pain in them now, the pain preceding death. Pain and unbelief. Her eyes were
a
.
How could I
It
.
you? she gasped.
only had a
was easy,
moment I
This confused
was a
.
before talking to a corpse, but
I
got
it
in.
said.
girl,
to
make
matters even
more
delightfully noir,
psychiatrist.
Since then Spillane has written eight additional novels which in turn have compiled as in the belles-lettres
yummy a set of statistics
as
have yet been garnered
game. They have sold more than seventy-four million
copies. In terms of foreign translations, this
body of work
is
now seeded
fifth in
world literature, topped only by Lenin, Tolstoy, Gorki, and Jules
Verne.
He
sellers
of
the only contemporary whose work figures
is
all
time. According to Alice
ume. Sixty Years of Best
Sellers,
among
the best
Payne Hackett's informative
of the ten best-selling fiction
titles
vol-
in the
Mickey Spillane (and it only remains to that when Miss Hackett's book was published,
history of writing, seven are by
be added, in in 1956,
all
fairness,
Mr. Spillane had then written only seven).
The denouement
of a Spillane story
is
always softly understated,
but not so the middle distance. Here's an engaging high point from The Girl Hunters:
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
278
My
hand smashed
into
bone and
and with the meaty impact
flesh
He
could smell the blood and hear the gagging intake of his breath. grabbed, his arms
to block
grabbed him with pain he shoved I
it
my
kill
with a half-turn. But
had
me
so violently
me,
I
his
on
fell
me
I
hands searching and ripping, and
and he was holding
did,
you be able
scene in the movie?"
me down
and butting
"Well,
some of
at
me
as
I
when
him off no matter
me
with his head
.
.
.
to re-create the exact
asked the Mick
I
manhood
the shock of incredible
felt
I
couldn't get
I
while he kept up that whistlelike screaming.
"Will
like
like a wild beast, his teeth tearing
pain and ribs break under his pounding and
what
hold of what
lost that fanatical
him, and with some blind hate driving him he came
left
I
almost to be noiseless, and in his frenzy of
as
stumbled over something and at
did something worse,
I
hands, squeezed and twisted and his scream was
woman's, so high-pitched
a
He just held on and I knew if I couldn't me. He figured I'd start the knee coming up
like great claws.
break him loose he could
and turned
I
I
mechanics of that
visited
him on the
fight
set.
that scene will simply have to be indicated,"
he
replied with simple candor.
The Girl Hunters,
like I,
The
Jury,
is
a story of personal vendetta
and eye-for-eye (or maybe even two-for-one) justice. Due to a miscalculation, which Mike himself feels responsible for, his beautiful assistant Velda (more friend than employee) has been killed, or so it is presumed, and Mike hits the road with good old-fashioned plasma-and-pulp vengeance in mind. lot at Elstree Studios just The film is being made on the outside London. It's a Robert Fellows wide-screen production, directed by Roy Rowland, and features, besides the author, Lloyd Nolan, Shirley Eaton and Scott Peters. One of the more unusual aspects of the book is that (like Fail-Safe) it also includes a real-life person as one of the major
MGM
characters "I
—
none other than Hy Gardner. nice touch," said Mickey. "And Hy
in this case
think
it's
a
is
going to play
himself in the movie." •
•
•
have received strong endorsement from unexpectedly intellectual quarters most notably from grand Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged, and the founder of the objectivist phiSpillane's literary conceptions
—
losophy. "Spillane," she says,
"is
the only writer today whose hero
knight and whose enemies represent evil."
He
is
is
a white
alone, she contends, in
having accepted the responsibility of taking a forthright moral position.
Mickey himself speaks
less abstractly
about
it.
"I've
been
in the business
Terry Southern for twenty-five years.
novel
in the
For someone ern orientation
one
ment
more
of pulps because there was
"
money
talk
moved out
I
279
field.
like myself,
with a Cafe Flore and White Horse Tav-
— where the whole point was not
— speaking with Spillane
book but to was refresh-
to write a
Game
in regard to the Lit.
itself.
"Mick,"
I
said, "the issue of the
entirely devoted
— except
magazine I'm preparing
and the
—
this for
is
to the
American
guffaw, and a slow, rather deliberate and
somehow
for ads
like,
natch
Literary Scene."
After a
terrific
menacing cracking of knuckles, the Mick said, "Yeah, I've seen those articles they never mention me; all they talk about are the Losers." "The Losers?" "The guys who didn't make it the guys nobody ever heard of." "Why would they talk about them?" "Because they can be condescending about the Losers. You know,
—
—
they can afford to say something nice about them. are usually written by Losers
— frustrated
writers.
You see, these articles And these writers re-
So naturally they never have anything good
sent success.
to say
about
the Winners." "Is
it
hard to be a Winner?"
"No, anybody can be a Winner
—
all
you have
to
do
is
make
sure
you're not a Loser."
"What brought about your
decision to portray
Mike Hammer your-
self?"
"Well, everyone was making a mess of
it;
they were
all
missing the
You see, Mike is a genuinely dedicated person. He's also a real person I mean he's not supposed to be like an actor. You know, a lot point.
—
Mike Hammer
of people believe in
— they write
advice about certain things, giving stronger than that. For example, big bookstore edition.
down
in
I
him
tips
letters to
him, asking his
and so on. And
was autographing
my
last
it's
book
even in a
Puerto Rico, and they ran out of the Spanish
So these people
started
buying the English edition
— they
you understand, but they wanted to have the new one with them anyway. It seemed to make them feel more secure to have it with them, even though they couldn't read it." "I suppose you have certain theories now about acting. What do you think of The Method?" "Pretending to be a tree and so on? No, that doesn't interest me. I have no interest in acting as such. Besides, this is not really an acting couldn't read
it
in English,
job."
Before
I
could get a clarification of
this last
remark, he was called
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
28o
back to the
and
set,
took the opportunity to corner the luscious Miss
I
Eaton. She was lolling on the sidelines in a black bikini, a veritable darling, adding a provocative touch of vermilion to her toenails.
"What do a
man
perfect
Hammer,
like
young
if I
may
darlings like yourself find attractive about
ask?"
detected a slight and exciting flush of ambivalence as she lowered
I
her smoldering gaze. "Well," she said softly,
you
what
disquieting twinkle, "and
dreams?
"if
like tigers
girl
doesn't
..." then confided with a
—
at least in
her dark wild
Hmm?"
"Are you kidding?" smile told
me no
Miss Eaton
I
asked, but her half-closed eyes and cryptic
more. is
a professional
and accomplished performer,
as are,
of course, Lloyd Nolan and the rest of the cast (except perhaps Hy Gardner). Could Mickey hold his own in this crowd? I sought out Mr.
Robert Fellows, amiable producer of the film and seasoned vet of Hollywood flicker productions since the heyday of de Mille. "Now see here," I said, "Spillane admits to no training as an actor
—how
he cope?" Mr. Fellows handed me Actor? which quoted Mickey
you
will
as saying
among
headed Spillane an
other things:
"I will tell
much, I am Mike Hammer!" "He is Mike Hammer? Is he serious?"
this
"Mike
Hammer
etly, "as you'll find
Not
a British press release,
is
Mickey's alter ego," Mr. Fellows explained qui-
you ever get drunk with him. he added with an ominous chuckle.
out quickly enough
if
would advise that," "You mean he starts kicking people's teeth out?" "No, no," said Mr. Fellows with a frown of distaste,
that
I
".
.
.
at least
not unduly." Actually Mickey Spillane seems to be a rather
person
— relaxed,
everyone
unselfish, with a
who meets
him. Like his
somewhat direct. "Thomas Wolfe was
warm and
likable
genuine naturalness that impresses manner, his opinions are strong and
a lousy writer,"
he
said.
"He
didn't
know what
he was doing."
"How
about Hemingway?"
—
you something about Hemingway he knocked me out of Life magazine once. I was set for a spread in Life and Hemingway had those plane crashes and it knocked me out of the issue." "I'll tell
"Well, what about his work?"
"No,
his
work was too morbid
for
me."
Terry Southern
"How
281
about Cain, Chandler, and Dashiell Hammett?"
"Well, Chandler was
all
right except that
conclusion. But these guys are
all
in the past.
he could never come
You
you've got to progress, you've got to keep ahead
to a
see, in this business
— or
else
you
just stay
behind, being imitated."
"Do you
like
anyone's work in particular?"
—
seem to know what they're doing they can't come to a conclusion. But I do like Fredric Brown and John D. Macdonthey have a point of view and they follow it." ald; they're good Mickey Spillane's books are now required reading in the writing "Most
writers don't
—
courses of
six different universities.
"How do you "The public
feel
about
literary criticism
And
of your books?"
what the public reads. The first printing of my last book was more than two million copies that's the kind of opinion that interests me." Then the Mick was called to the set again, back to the turbulent embrace of Miss Eaton. So I decided to walk over and see for myself how things were going. There beneath lights and camera lay a lavish patio pool, framed in the swank courtyard of a Westport-type mansion. The blonde Miss Eaton was reclining on a chaise lounge black bikini, veris
the only
critic.
the only literature
is
—
milion nails
—
—
a perfect vibrant darling as she stretched lithely forward to
lay a persuasive "I
think
I
hand on Mickey's sleeve. could like you, Mike ..." she
said in a voice
both husky
and tremulous, "quite a lot." Mickey shook his head, unsmiling. "I'm trouble, baby," he said earnestly.
And
must say the Mick looked pretty good in there. Exactly the way Tiger Mike would have handled it, I thought. The filming oiThe Girl Hunters represents the first time, of course, that a protagonist has been portrayed by its author on the silver screen. If Spillane's undertaking is a successful one, and it appears quite possible, will
it
I
not definitely signal a
new
trend in creative fiction?
are, in fact, already regarding this as a
Many
writers
unique and long-awaited oppor-
way not merely with the run-of-the-mill starlets but with their ideal woman, the girl of their dreams, the marvelous heroine of their own creation. Does it not follow that our literary chaps, tunity for having their
with their voraciously inquiring minds, their insatiate quest to get to the
bottom of things, will start writing in outlandishly heroic sex scenes, with an eye to ultimate personal realization? It must also be remembered that your writer is notoriously more virile, more sexually interesting, and unscrupulous than is your effete or coldly professional actor. Also gen-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
282
erally better-looking.
This
is
known
fact. I
say
we may
almost incredible developments on the shooting ished director shouting, "Cut! Cut!"
on chaps
like
is
set.
An
anticipate irate
apt to have precious
some
and astonlittle
effect
Mailer and Kerouac once they are swinging.
But what about the broader implications? Is possible that here we have stumbled onto the key highly sought and hitherto unavailable film rights
it
not just remotely
to obtaining certain
— Holden
Caulfield's,
example? Has anyone sounded J.D. about this? But, of course, the real coup will be when some enterprising producer signs up grand old Henry Miller providing, natch, that Hank is given free rein, and the for
—
books are done
right,
without your usual cinematic compromise.
Thomas
Berger
CHEF REINHART EXCERPT FROM
unemployed for housekeeper and cook, auditions [Carl Reinhart,
Reitihart's
Women
years, currently acting as his daughter's
TV chef.
as a
Ed.]
At the television studio everyone encountered by Reinhart was young, slender, dressed in jeans, and quick-moving. They were also, all of them,
When
he realized that he was actually going to appear on TV that morning, he had dosed his coffee with brandy, but he remained anxious. The studio people needed him two hours before he was unfailingly
civil.
scheduled to face the cameras, which meant he had had to arise thirty, after getting
almost no sleep. •
At the studio he was seated people walked terless
at four-
•
•
in a corridor
through which
many
one of them, a young woman of characstopped and introduced herself as Jane.
briskly. Finally
brunette good looks,
She consulted a piece of paper affixed to a clipboard. "You're the chef, O.K.? We'll get you into make-up in a few minutes, O.K.? You want to check your pots 'n' pans 'n' stuff?" He followed her, around little clusters of people and lights and cameras and cables, onto what was obviously a corner of the set. "You've got a whole kitchen here." It looked like a permanent installation and had everything one would need, within two walls without a ceiling.
"We do
segment of some kind every day," said Jane. dye Easter eggs or make Play-Doh from flour and
a cooking
"Sometimes we
just
salt."
Reinhart opened the copper-colored refrigerator. Just inside, on
gleaming chromium-wire shelves, was a large
glass
bowl
filled
with eggs
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
284
and
a generous
chunk of butter on
a plate of glass.
He had
glass canister
bore
GRATED CHEESE.
a solid white label, imprinted in large black letters:
"Everything there?" asked Jane.
A
ordered these omelet-mak-
ing materials the day before.
"Except
and pepper,"
salt
He turned He had not
said Reinhart. "I gather they'll
be over
would face the camseen much of this show, but he had watched other era. programs on which cooking was done. Ah, yes: electric burners were built into the top of the counter, and a ceramic jug stood nearby, holding spatulas, big forks, etc., and salt and pepper were alongside in large white here."
to the free-standing counter that
shakers, again labeled in black.
"Oh, and the but
my
skillet. I
boss insisted
was going
on one
putting on the market, in a
company
that her
new
mine, which
to bring
line of
is
is
seasoned,
apparently thinking of
cooking utensils."
"Grace Greenwood," said Jane. "Yeah, she sent over some special stuff." She poked amongst the open shelves below the counter-top, on the
left
of the burners. "Take a look.
Reinhart bent and found a
It
should
skillet,
all
be here."
a lightweight stainless-steel job
with a thin wash of copper on the outside bottom. "This
is
it?"
He
winced. "I'm going to have to be very careful to keep from burning the omelet. This
is
trash."
Jane put one finger on the nosepiece of her glasses
now Reinhart had
not noticed. "If
it
— which
until
does burn, then just don't turn
over on camera, O.K.?" She sniffed. "Don't panic:
this
is
it
the magic of
remember." Some young man shouted her name, and she went away. Reinhart looked about: everything seemed a good deal smaller than anything he had ever seen on the screen. For some reason he thought he might have been more at ease had things been larger. He was suddenly jumping with video,
nerves.
Jane returned and took him into a room where he sat in a kind of
and was made up by a deft, laconic young man. When the job was finished, he ducked into a booth in the men's room and drank some cognac from the half-pint in his pocket. The well-known movie star Jack Buxton was urinating in one of the stalls as Reinhart emerged. Apparently they were to be fellow guests on
barber's chair
the show.
when Reinhart
Jane came from nowhere
him back
left
the lavatory and led
to a chair in the corridor.
"Sorry
we
don't have a real
"Wasn't that Jack Buxton
I
Green Room," she said. saw in the men's room?"
Thomas
Berger
285
"He's plugging his show." Jane consulted her clipboard.
on the
"You go
do a run-through in about five minutes from now, so you'll have your moves down pat. This is live, you know. We can't do retakes." She left the area. And here came Jack Buxton. Reinhart seldom went to the movies nowadays, and he hadn't seen a performance of Buxton's in God, air at
seven forty-seven, but
we'll
—
could
it
be that long?
"Hi," said the actor, flopping his large, heavy body into the chair
next to Reinhart's. "Hi," said Reinhart. "This
is
quite a pleasure for me. I've always
enjoyed your pictures."
seemed enormous. He grinned at Reinhart. "Thanks, pal, I needed that. Listen" he dug into an inside pocket of his Glen-plaid jacket and withdrew a leathercovered notepad "I'll send an autographed picture to your kids, if you give me the names and address." "My kids are grown up," said Reinhart. Buxton's long lip drooped. It was true he looked a good deal older than when Reinhart had last seen him. "But I'd like one for myself." This lie failed to cheer up the actor by much, but he pretended to take the name and address. Reinhart asked: "Are you in a new picture?" Buxton inhaled. "I'm considering some scripts," said he. "But I'm in town here to do Song of Norway." He put his notebook away and adjusted his jacket. Like Reinhart he was wearing face make-up that made the skin look beige. The heavy pouches under his eyes and the deep lines flanking his mouth could be seen all too clearly at close range but probably would be diminished on their voyage through the camera. "Oh," said Reinhart, "I'll have to see it." If memory served, the vehicle was a musical: he hadn't been aware that Buxton sang. The actor was best known for his war films. "It'll be my pleasure," Buxton said, cheering up now, and he reached into his pocket and withdrew a pair of tickets. "These are for the show only. Dinner's separate, I'm afraid, but ..." Buxton's face, perhaps owing to
its
familiarity,
—
—
Reinhart accepted the tickets with thanks. expect you to pay for the food
Buxton frowned.
"It's
I
He
joked: "I wouldn't
ate before going to the show!"
the dinner theater. That's what
I
meant.
It's
no comedown either. That's the latest thing. I don't mind it at all." But clearly he felt humiliated at the thought of people digesting their steaks while he performed. For his own part Reinhart was only now remembering that he had never really liked Buxton as an actor or at any rate, he had not found Buxton's roles sympathetic: there was always
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
286
whom
one expected the worst, owing to the cocky, smart-ass personahty he displayed at the outset. But then he came through courageously in the pinch, kept the plane aloft though badly wounded, or fell on the grenade, saving his comrades. Buxton was still worrying. "I started out on the Broadway stage," said he. "I was trained for musical comedy, long before I went to Tinsel a resentful streak in the character, of
1
own.
So they
really said that.
"I'll
bet you're good," said Reinhart. "I look
forward to the show."
Buxton leaned over. He had maintained his familiar widow's peak of yore, and the scalp looked genuine, but why a professional would have his hair dyed matte black, leaving sparkling white sideburns, was not selfevident.
"Say," he said, "you wouldn't
know where
a
man could
get a drink?"
His breath smelled of mint Life Saver. "Well,
now ..."
Reinhart reached into his pocket for the half-pint
of brandy.
But Buxton
"Not here." They got up and were heading for the men's room when Jane came along and carried Reinhart away. "We'll do the omelet run-through," said she, and when they had left Buxton behind she said: "It's Has-Been City around here lots of mornings. Watch yourself with that one: he'll hit you up for a loan." Reinhart felt he owed Buxton some loyalty, the actor having embodied the old-fashioned virtues until both he and they went out of fashion, to be replaced by nothing and nobody worth mentioning. "I always liked
him
said:
in the movies."
"He was through before my time," said Jane in her brisk way. Time was all. Twenty years earlier some Jane might have seen Buxton as a rung on her own climb to success. They were in the kitchen now. Reinhart practiced the movements he would make on camera. Taking the eggs and butter from the refrigerator to the counter consumed too much of his allotted three minutes.
On
the other hand, as Jane pointed out, too
diminish the dramatic
effect.
The
much
premeditation would
eggs, for example, should
remain
whole, to be broken on camera.
"Debbie
will
ad
lib
said Jane. "O.K., that's
something about making the perfect omelet,"
your cue to answer. You
you break the eggs.' Don't, for God's sake, joke you know, 'First you steal two eggs' Everybody takes everything personally."
—
tell
—
say, 'Well,
Debbie,
first
the old Hungarian-omelet
we'll get too
much bad
mail.
Thomas Berger
287
Debbie was the "co-host" of the program, with a man named Shep Cunningham. Meeting her backstage apparently violated some show-biz rule, and having rarely tuned in to Channel Five at this hour, Reinhart had little sense of the woman. Cunningham, however, had formerly been anchorman on the Six O'clock News: his amiable, insensitive face above a wide-bladed tie and even wider lapels was remembered. But Reinhart was to have no direct connection with him whatever this morning. "For
all
the woman's
kitchen this time of day
is
movement,"
said
Jane, "anything in the
always played to the ladies." She looked up at
one of the clocks that were mounted overhead at frequent intervals throughout the studio. Monitor TV sets were everywhere, as well. Someone was speaking through a public-address system: it was like the voice of God, and hence quite startling when it uttered foul language. Jane said: "You'd better put on the chef's hat and apron." Reinhart was getting into the spirit of the place. "Oh, God," he said,
with real despair,
"I forgot to
bring them!"
Jane shook her head. "Your office sent them over." She led Reinhart to a
donned
little
The
it.
dressing room, where he found the cook's costume and
toque was pristine, but the apron was imprinted, over the
region of the heart, with the logo of Grace Greenwood's firm: the
EPICON
name
printed in the form of a croissant. This was something new.
he emerged: she apparently had a sixth sense about these matters, for he was certain she had not been lingering there. Again she took him to the chairs in the corridor. Buxton was Jane
came along
just as
missing.
now. You can watch the monitor." She pointed to one high on the wall across from him. "I'll have somebody Jane
said:
"O.K.,
it's
just waiting
bring you coffee, O.K?"
A young man hart dosed
it
brought the coffee. As discreetly
with brandy.
He had had the
cheaper stuff was hardly drinkable
as
he could, Rein-
sense to buy expensive cognac:
in the best of times,
but with morning
would erode the stomach. The monitor was showing a rerun of an ancient situation comedy, in which the adult male characters all wore crew cuts and suits a size too small, and all the children were well behaved and everybody did absurd but decent things. The sound was turned down to a murmur, and when the old show gave way to the seven o'clock news report, the volume came up to a level of command and the backstage noise died away. International crises were routine this morning and given little more than noncommittal platitudes by the newscaster, an attractive fair-haired
coffee
it
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
288
woman who
used the intonations of a man. Locally a citizen had hand-
cuffed himself to a light-pole at a
downtown
intersection as a protest, but
what had not yet been established, and opening the cuffs had thus far been beyond the powers of the police, who believed them of against
foreign origin.
Then,
Show came
to the strains of a lilting musical
theme, the Eye Opener
Shep Cunningham, between his desk and a photomural of the cityscape. Reinhart saw and heard him on the monitor screen, though presumably the man himself was just a partition away. After a greeting and an observation on the rainy weather, Shep said: "But enough of this nonsense. Let's get to the beauty part. Here's Debbie Howland." The camera panned to his left, the curtains there parted, and out came a very winsome young woman with dark red hair and a jersey dress in lime green. She had an ebullient stride. on. There was
"Good morning, Shep,"
said Debbie, taking a seat next to her
partner.
Shep winked
at the
camera and
said:
"Notice
7
don't get to walk
Maybe if I lost ten pounds?" He grinned and shrugged and said: "Tell us who we'll meet today, Deb or should that be 'whom'?" Debbie smiled into the camera. "Shep, when you think of that classic quality known as Hollywood there are a few names that embody it in themselves alone: personalities like the Duke and the never-to-beacross the
set.
—
forgotten Bogie, and likewise with our guest this morning. Mister Holly-
wood
himself, Jack Buxton."
"Oh, wow," said Shep. "I want new pals the Chinese Communists in Korean War films."
—
Reinhart suspected
him how he feels about our fighting them so many times
to ask after
this reference
own World War II
was not authentic:
in his
memories Buxton was always involved cinematically with Germans. Indeed, if memory served, at least once he had played a Nazi. Debbie went on: "And then our own Bobby Allen, Man in the Street, live out there in the pouring rain, will get an answer to today's question hey, Shep, it's not about sex for a change Shep groaned. "That's bad news." "C'mon, now, this is important: 'Nuclear Power Love It or Leave
—
—
—
" It?'
"That
IS
important," said Shep. "I was kidding."
"And then," Debbie
said, "a
the perfect omelet in a minute.
French chef will show us how
to
make
Sound good?"
"Mouth's watering already," said Shep. "My beautiful wife Judy's on a diet kick. I don't know, maybe I'm weird, but alfalfa sprouts on lowfat cottage cheese is not my idea of breakfast."
Thomas Berger
289
"Come on" said Debbie. "Washed down with herb tea." "Come on. You're kidding." "Yes,
I
am,"
said the last time
Debbie
I
said Shep. "Incidentally, that's the
same thing my
wife
tried to get friendly with her."
rolled her eyes.
"Oh-oh.
I
think
it's
time to hear from our
sponsor."
first
Under his apron Reinhart tipped the cognac bottle into the now empty Styrofoam cup. It was just as well that Buxton had not reappeared: the cook would not have been keen on sharing his supply of Dutch courage. He was himself no professional performer, and the neurer he got to going on camera, the more he realized how crazy he had been to let
Grace do
this to
him. For God's sake, he wasn't even a professional
chef.
Suddenly Jane came and led him onto the TV kitchen, holding a finger to her lips, so that he couldn't ask questions. But he looked up and saw a clock, and already it registered Anxiety makes the time
7:35
fly.
— and then without warning was
at a quarter to eight
was reading brief headlines from the news, and then,
an
a voice
instant, a red
glowed from the darkness before him and Reinhart was on the
light
Or
in
and
air!
so the sequence seemed.
Across the room, though actually very close to him, Shep Cun-
ningham
sat at
the desk, and Debbie was just entering the kitchen.
Reinhart had been deaf to the preliminary comments, and for a
he had the
terrified feeling that
moment
she might be coming to expose him as a
fraud.
But she was smiling.
"Is there a secret to
omelet-making. Chef?"
Reinhart was amazed to hear a deep, mellow baritone voice emerge
from
he were lip-synching to a record made by someone could be called that, Debbie, but it's not the kind of
his chest, as if
else. "I
suppose
it
would interest a Russian spy." Debbie giggled dutifully here. Luckily he overcame an impulse to build a large comic structure on the feeble piling of this witticism. Quite soberly he said: "It's simply speed. The egg, once out of its shell which has been called nature's perfect container incidentally the naked egg is a very sensitive substance." He was aware that persons out there, off camera, were gesturing at him, and now Debbie stepped lightly on his foot. Of course, he must begin to break eggs! Amazingly enough, everything he needed was at hand and his hand was sure, in fact even defter than when he was alone in his own kitchen. In one movement he seemed simultaneously to have not only cracked two shells but opened them and drained them of their contents. secret that
—
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
290
His flying fork whipped the yolks and whites into a uniform cream.
Meanwhile the butter was melting
He was
in the skillet.
speaking authoritatively. "Speed's the secret, but
break the fifty-five-mile
we
limit:
Meanwhile, we've got our
filling
let
ready. In this case
I
But
it's
Swiss cheese, for
if it's
properly made,
nothing better, and nothing more elegant."
"Or more nutritious," Chef,
don't
the butter reach the frothing point.
that simplest of dishes, a plain cheese omelet. there's
we
said
Debbie, nodding vigorously. "Gee,
can't wait."
—
We've got our cheese all grated already and may I strongly recommend that you always grate your own cheese from a fresh piece: you can do that in a blender or a food processor, if it's too much work for you by hand. In this case the cheese is simple Swiss, but an even more delicious filling would be Swiss mixed with a bit of Parmesan." A moment earlier he had put two tablespoonfuls of the cheese from the canister into a shallow bowl. "Ah, there we go, just as the frothing begins to subside and before it turns color, the eggs go in quickly, quickly, and you keep stirring them, stir, stir, as they begin to and now the cheese goes in, all at once!" thicken and curds appear He emptied the contents of the bowl onto the mass of eggs, lifted the skillet from the burner, inserted the fork under the near edge of what was already an omelet, folded one half across the other, and slid the "Just about time
.
.
.
.
.
.
finished product onto a china plate.
"My
goodness," said Debbie, "you don't even cook the top side?
That must be my trouble, why my omelets are so dry. I always turn 'em over." She accepted the dish from him, and holding it high, raised a fork in her hand.
becomes the inside of the omelet, and you want that moist," Reinhart said. "And you must remember that whenever uncooked eggs are around heat, something's going on. The hot omelet continues to cook for a while after you take it from the pan. That's happening right now, in fact, Debbie." "Mmm, oh, golly," said she, making rapid eyeball movements as she tasted a modicum of egg from the end of her fork. "Hey. Say. Ohoh, Shep, we've got a winner, and don't think you're getting any of it." Shep in fact was not behind his desk or anywhere in sight, so far as Reinhart could see. Debbie waved her fork and looked into the camera. "Well, now you know how to do it like an expert." She turned back to Reinhart. "Thank you. Chef who appeared here courtesy of the Epicon Company. Back to you, Shep." And just like that, Reinhart was off and Shep, back at the desk, was "Yes, the top
—
Thomas on, and reading a
list
Berger
291
of local announcements: fund-raising charity din-
and the like. Debbie put down her plate and disappeared behind the set. For a moment Reinhart was desolated: not only was his performance over, but functionaries kept hauling equipment past him as if he did not exist and he stood in what seemed evening, for the ners, Shriner circus,
glare of the lights
was gone.
But then the estimable Jane was at his elbow, steering him out. When they reached the outer corridor she said: "You were dynamite,
Thanks a lot." "Thank you, Jane. Do I go back to Make-up to get cleaned up?" The light had gone from her eye with her thank-you. Already she looked at him as if he were a stranger. "You can take it off with soap and water." She pointed to the men's room and went away. So much for show business. Reinhart shrugged and laughed for his own benefit. He went through the door into the lavatory, which was deserted. He had always assumed the performers had a private washroom of some kind, but perhaps that was true only at the big network studios in New York and Chicago. This place was clean enough, with dispenser of liquid soap and a wall-hung paper-towel device. He began to run a Carl.
bowlful of
warm
He had
water, but turned the faucet off abruptly.
had been barely audible, but there was sufficient of it to raise the hair on the back of the neck, though he could not have said precisely why: something instinctively dreadful. He went back to the toilet booths. In one of them a human being was obviously sagging in a terrible way: trousered knees could be seen on the tiles below the door. Nothing else was visible. Again the gasping heard a muffled sound:
it
sound.
The the
stall
would open obstruction. Reinhart climbed on the
was locked from within, and furthermore
wrong way, given the
seat of the toilet next
interior
door and leaned over the
it
partition.
Jack Buxton was kneeling on the floor, clawing the bleak metal wall.
He had gone
bald in back, just
down from
the crown of his head: a large
become dislodged in his writhings. Trousers and underpants were halfway down his thighs. He had apparently been sitting on the can when the attack came. hairpiece had
His large torso
filled
There would be no sense
the short space between the bowl and the door. in Reinhart's trying to
climb
down
to join him.
Reinhart ran out into the corridor and stopped a young ing outsized eyeglasses.
"Jack Buxton
"Who?"
is
dying in there!"
man
wear-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
292
man
"There's a
in the toilet, having a heart attack,
"Show me where
by the looks of
an ambulance."
it,"
said Reinhart.
his
For an instant the young man resisted the thought, suggesting by set of nose that he might respond sardonically, but then he took a
chance and
down
to call
"There's a house doctor.
said:
get him."
I'll
He went
rapidly
the corridor.
Reinhart was trying to decide whether to go back inside. Would his
some remote human comfort guard the door until the doctor arrived. Those
presence, though practically useless, be of
He decided to who might come to use the facilities Of course the waiting seemed Buxton?
to
should be warned. endless. Considerable traffic passed
He
him, but none brought the physician.
kept reminding himself that in
was tenfold, and avoided watching the clock. But when he could no longer forbear, he looked at the dial and saw that he had indeed waited a good ten minutes. such
a state a second's duration
At that point Jane came walking rapidly by, studying her clipboard. She would not have seen him had he not called out. She stared without expression, perhaps without recognition.
"Goddammit," he there! Get a doctor!"
cried, "Jack
some
His alarm caused
visible
Buxton
having a heart attack in
is
consternation
among
studio folk. Persons passing in the vicinity looked at
the backstage
him
in fear
and
man came running to scowl at Jane and say: You can hear that on the set." He resembled the
repugnance, and a young
"Get him out of here. guy who had gone, presumably, to fetch the doctor, but Reinhart couldn't be sure else he'd have hit him in the mouth.
—
Jane was staring
at Reinhart.
"Buxton's supposed to go on at eight
nineteen."
Reinhart put his face into hers. This time he spoke almost
"You fucking idiot: I said hes dying in Her immediate reaction was odd: a
moment he
the toilet. a wide,
Go
softly:
get help!"
even warm smile, and
for
considered putting his hands towards her throat, but then
she whirled and
moved
smartly away, and
now
it
was no time before a
bushy-haired youth in jeans and denim jacket, but carrying the familiar black bag, arrived and identified himself as Dr. Tytell.
when, with the help of a skinny, nimble member of the staff, the door was unlatched and the actor was examined, there on the tile floor. And he was yet alive, if barely, when the ambu-
Buxton was
still
him away. Jane came along
living
lance took
the stretcher
down
as
Reinhart stood watching the attendants wheel
the hall, and seeing her, he "
nasty before.
It
was nothing personal.
said:
"Sorry
I
had
to be
Thomas
Berger
293
She made no acknowledgment of the apology, but stared intently at him and said: "Carl, can you fill another ten minutes? All we've got is still only eggs and butter, but there must be lots of tricks you can show with those."
was Reinhart's turn to smile nonsensically, but even as he did it he understood that, as with Jane on learning of Buxton's heart attack, it was momentary fear. And yet not half an hour ago he had wanted only to continue performing forever! "Let me think," he said, doing anything but. The effect of the cognac had been dissipated by now. Jane looked at him for an instant and then left quickly. He sat down on the chair in the corridor. The threat of another performance was It
warring with the reverberations of the experience with poor Buxton:
perhaps
it
would be resolved by
his
own
heart attack.
But suddenly before him, in all the radiance of her bright hair, dress, and make-up, was Debbie Howland. She took the chair previously occupied by Buxton, leaned over to touch Reinhart's forearm, and said: "Carl, poor us with a great big hole from eight thirty-three
Jack's accident has left till
the quarter-of-nine
We've got a couple of commercial breaks and a public-service announcement during that period, so call it eight and a half minutes for you to fill. Can you do it? I know you can. Got a cookbook you want to headlines.
plug?
It
Or
doesn't have to be new.
restaurant or whatever?"
Jane had been wise to fetch Debbie. This appeal was as from one professional performer to another, and Reinhart took heart from it. "Sure," said he, with confidence, "sure, Debbie. Glad to help out."
She flung her head back, but not one strand of hair seemed to stir. "Oh, godamighty, what a superloverly sweetheart you are!" She leaped up and strode presumably towards the set. Another repetition of the uneventful news came at eight thirty, and then, after a commercial or two and an exhortation from the Coast Guard, Shep returned to say: "Debbie's hungry again. She can eat all day long, and her waistline just keeps getting smaller. Me, I chew a leaf of lettuce and gain ten pounds. It ain't fair. Let's see what's happening in the kitchen this time."
And
Reinhart was on again!
"We're back again with Chef Carl Reinhart," Debbie said into the camera, "for more with eggs.
I
guess they're one of the most versatile
foods around, wouldn't you say. Chef?"
This was actually true enough. "Yes, Debbie," Reinhart smilingly
on-camera voice and manner, which though not studied was markedly different from his style in real life. "You will never run out replied in his
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
294
of ways to cook eggs, and then
form
a
you think of all the dishes of which eggs part you have a whole menu, because eggs can be the star, as in if
a big beautiful golden puffy souffle, or a co-star, as with
and
a supporting player, as in crepes,
when, say, a raw egg delicious hamburger." even an
extra,
"Well," said Debbie,
"is
is
ham
or bacon,
modest bit performer or mixed with ground beef to make a finally, a
the trick with eggs always speed, as
with that scrumptious omelet you
made
it
was
earlier?"
"Not always. With a souffle of course you might say it's patience!" Debbie chuckled. "I know we don't have time to make a souffle this morning, but the next time you come back I wish you'd show us that trick. I guess that's one of the toughest dishes for the home cook to learn, isn
t it?
Reinhart smiled with mixed authority and sympathy. "You know,
Debbie, a of the
lot
many
of people believe that, but
things in
life
it
isn't all that true. It's just
one
that are mostly bluff."
"Like early-morning television," cried Debbie. Giggling and addressing the again-empty desk, she added: "Right, Shep?" "I can't believe that," graciously said all
you have
to
understand
is
the cook, "but with a souffle
the basic principle:
air.
Somebody way back
you take the white of an egg from the yolk you can whip it so full of air that it becomes a kind of solid matter, while remaining feather-light. What a wonderful discovery! And a whipped white is pretty strong, too. It will hold in suspension any number of fillings and flavorings: shrimp, asparagus tips, and even eggs themselves, whole poached eggs. That makes a fabulous souffle, incidentally. You dig down through the fluffy stuff and suddenly come upon a gem of a in history discovered that
if
poached egg. It's like a treasure hunt." Debbie laughed happily. "I can see you love your work and by the way, that's essential in cooking, isn't it? Love, I mean." "It doesn't hurt," said Reinhart. "But I wouldn't want to discourage the people who don't have a natural inclination. You dont have to be
—
passionately interested in cuisine to I
say that because
who have found
it
I
do
a
commendable
think there are a lot of people,
job at the stove.
women
especially,
necessary to cook for others and think they have no
you can't cook well, even if you hate the idea, you may be in a position where you have to do it and I assure you that there are scores and scores of wonderful dishes you can make easily." "Easy for you, anyway," said Debbie. She was looking into the talent.
Even
if
—
camera. "We'll be back, but
now
this."
Reinhart waited until the red light went off the camera pointed
at
Thomas
Berger
295
them and then saw by the monitor of the
come onto
commercial had
wall that a
the screen.
Debbie asked: "What should
I
say you're going to cook now, or are
you?
"Poached eggs." He took a pot from the shelf below the counter and went to the sink behind him. "Does this work?" He turned the coldwater faucet, and, by George, it did, but he got a better idea and ran the hot water. The commercials were still on the screen when he came back
He
with the water. with the
sprinkled a bit of salt into the pot before closing
and placing
lid
it
on
a lighted
burner of the
it
electric stove.
Debbie said vivaciously: "Do you know, something I enjoy eating but never have been able to cook right is a poached egg. Can you help
me
out with that problem, Carl?"
They were of course on the before the water came to a boil.
air again.
He had
to
fill
some moments
"There are various kinds of gadgets that will do the job," he said. "Have you seen the little pots that have a metal insert with depressions, little wells that take one egg each? You boil water underneath them, and
comes up
the steam
to
cook the
eggs.
steamed and not poached. There egg
is
cooked
is
directly in the water
But
in this case the eggs are
and
is
better than anything prepared with a gadget."
which held the
variety of tools for cooking,
The
poached lovely and tender and always
a difference.
classic
He reached
and removed
a
into the jug
soup
ladle.
"But /low," Debbie asked in a tone of mock despair, "how can we
keep the egg from off
and drop
it
just busting all
in boiling water?"
over the place
She mugged
at
when you
take
its
shell
the camera.
Speaking of boiling, his potful of water had begun already to show wisps of steam around "Well,
medium,
a
first,
little
its lid.
you don't want a violent
boil: just
kind of firm and
higher than a simmer, but not a storm. Next you take
your soup ladle and rub or melt a
bit
of butter in
its
bowl."
He demon-
"Now, when the bottom of the ladle-bowl is covered with a thin layer of butter, you break an egg into it. This is easy to do if you can break a shell with one hand. If you can't do that, simply prop the ladle up inside an empty pot." "Gee, you think of everything," said Debbie. "That's how you can tell a Cordon Bloo cook." "The egg's in the buttered ladle," said Reinhart, speaking of the self-evident, but then perhaps there were TV sets with murky pictures strated this piece of business.
.
and elsewhere busy housewives were their sets.
"You lower the
.
.
listening as they worked, backs to
ladle into the boiling water
..."
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
296
Debbie gasped
in
enlightenment.
"A white film of coagulation forms around the egg, where it touches the ladle. Now, you gently and smoothly tip up the ladle so that the egg slides free into
the water."
"Ooo, but look—" "Don't worry about the ragged
"That's O.K.," said Reinhart.
streamers of white that blow around in the water. Also, a bit of the
coagulated film remains in the dipper."
He
grinned.
"You
rise
above
such things. Seriously, you see that within a second or two the egg shaping firmly up. Later we'll trim off the ragged edges
— which
is
you
always get, no matter the method, unless of course you use a gadget.
Meanwhile you quickly add another egg in the same fashion, and so on. If you have more than three or four, you might keep an eye on the order of insertion: the earlier will be done sooner than the later. But for the few the difference in time
first
will
be so
little
as
to
be meaning-
less."
"Well, you could knock
me over with a basting brush," said
leering into the pot, then at Reinhart,
man
"This I
is
a marvel.
By gosh,
if
and
Debbie,
the unseen audience.
finally at
those eggs aren't forming beautifully.
always end up with strings of scrambled boiled eggs. That ain't to be
recommended,
friends.
.
.
.
We're going away
for a
we come back, Chef Reinhart will tell us what we know how to poach them to perfection."
When
to
few moments.
do with the eggs now
they were off Debbie leaned into Reinhart and whispered:
"Just terrific, Carl. You're saving
He wondered
briefly
our asses."
what had happened
to
poor old Buxton
himself would understand, in the tradition of show business,
more concern must
He
When
— who
why any
wait until the performance was over.
asked his partner:
"How much more
time do
we have
to
fill?"
"Forty-five seconds."
Could that be true? He confirmed the time gone?
When
He
it
by the wall clock. Where had
could continue for hours!
had "returned" (from wherever whoever had been, and whatever was real) Debbie said: "O.K., Chef Reinhart. You were going to tell us how to use our poached eggs." "I should say first, Debbie, that / cook them by instinct, but I'd really advise the use of a timer: about four minutes should do the trick. Ours here haven't been on quite that long yet. But to answer your question: A poached egg goes with almost anything: On top of asparagus or pureed spinach. Or cold, in aspic, as an hors d'oeuvre. Covered with caviar
they,
— lumpfish,
or the audience,
not the expensive kind.
And above
all
in the ever-
Thomas
Berger
297
popular eggs Benedict: a toasted round of bread or muffin, a
slice
of ham,
poached egg, and over it all a thick, creamy, lemony hollandaise sauce which by the way is childishly easy to make "You're killing me!" wailed Debbie. "You know that. Because we're out of time, and I'm dying of hungerrrr! But can you come back sometime soon?" She gestured at him. "Chef Carl Reinhart, courtesy of the Epicon Company, distributors of gourmet foods and their new line of copper-clad cookware. Thanks, Chef. Now back to Shep." When they were "off," Debbie squeezed his forearm. "Thanks, pal." She walked briskly away, behind the set. On camera Shep was reading the news headlines. Jane came to conduct Reinhart off. When they had reached the corridor she said: "You were fabulous, Carl. We're grateful a whole bunch." a
—
—
Reinhart asked: "Have you checked with the hospital?"
"Huh-uh." "I'm thinking of Jack Buxton," he said. find
him
in the
like that,
men's room.
I
was pretty shocking
"It
to
wonder whether he pulled
through."
Jane looked at him with solemn eyes. "Carl,
I'll
call right
now."
"That'd be nice of you."
"We owe you
When placed the
"
one.
she was gone call to
it
occurred to him that he could himself have
the hospital: in other words, his self-righteousness
should be restrained.
For the
first
time since he had put them on, he remembered that
—
he was wearing the apron and chefs bonnet and now took them off at last. Once he was out of costume he was more resigned to being off the set. But, God, he enjoyed performing!
When
Jane returned she was carrying the jacket to his suit and his
She helped him "Huh?"
raincoat.
"Buxton.
He
didn't
into these
make
it.
and then
He
said:
"He bought the farm."
died in the ambulance."
"Aw," said Reinhart. "Aw, the poor bastard." Jane nodded in a noncommittal fashion.
remember him when he was Holman. The fact is it just comes back to
"See," Reinhart said defiantly, lywood's most notorious ladies'
me
— he was
in court
from time
"I
—
to time for sexual things: paternity suits
and charges of statutory rape. He had a taste for sixteen-year-olds. God, that was before World War Two. It's a good forty years ago. must have been about seventy now."
My He
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
298
"Well," said Jane, "I've got to get back to work. Bye, Carl.
Hope
you're on again soon."
"Uh,"
"you know what
said he,
I
forgot?
To
turn off those poached
eggs."
"They're in the garbage long since," said Jane. "Don't worry."
Reinhart
left
the studio reflecting on mortality, but
reached the parking
lot
where he had
young black man with saw on TV."
attendant, a
cook
I
just
Reinhart could see the
little set,
a
left
when he
Winona's borrowed
marked limp,
said:
car, the
"You're that
through the open door of the shack
where the attendant sat between arrivals and departures. Debbie was back on the screen. It was hard to believe he had just left her company. He realized that he had never got around to washing off his make-up. "I knew you right away," said the attendant. "That's what TV gives you: a high recognition potential."
He
went, with a jouncing stride that
defied his limp, to fetch the car.
Reinhart suddenly understood that as a celebrity he would be expected to
tip
generously.
Russell Baker
BOMB MATH
Wearing
his Secretary of
Defense hat,
Elliot
Richardson gave Congress
the other day a fascinating glimpse into the mathematics of saving the hearts and minds of remote peoples from whatever our
them from when they bomb
bombers save
their countries.
During one quarter of this year (February, March, April), he said, the United States dropped 145,000 tons of bombs on Cambodia and Laos. Population of the two countries is about 10 million persons.
Changing tons
to
pounds, we begin to see
light.
Territory contain-
ing 10 million people has been struck with 290 million pounds of bombs, or, to
put
it
another way, the United States has been bombing
at
the rate
of 29 pounds per person per quarter.
Extrapolating over a
full year,
we
get a
formulation; to wit, that the United States
tian/Cambodian
The
is
more useful mathematical bombing the average Lao-
bomb pounds per year. then arises, What is the
at the rate of 116
interesting question
weight of the
average Laotian/Cambodian?
Here we lack data. We know them to be small people physically. We can only guess at what proportion of them is too young to have attained adult weight. Conceding these data deficiencies, it is still not unreasonable to hypothesize that our average Laotian/Cambodian weighs 87 pounds or three-quarters of the annual bomb poundage used by the United States to save his heart and mind. Secretary Richardson suggested that the bombing has done its job (which is to preserve the Government of a man named Lon Nol) and says it must go on in order to continue preserving this Government. Thus, for those of us interested solely in the mathematics of the thing.
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
300
Mr. Richardson may present
bombing
level
is
we may
then
If so,
be said to have stated the proposition that the sufficient for the saving of hearts and minds.
fairly
state a general
mathematical formula for deter-
mining the bomb poundage the United States will have to drop to save the hearts and minds of any given nation. = (4W/3)P, where represents hearts and This formula is: represents weight of the average body containing the heart minds,
HM
HM
W
and mind
be saved and P represents
to
total
population of the
bombed
country.
Example: Suppose
How many
Italy.
necessary to save the hearts and minds of
it is
pounds of bombs
will
we need? To
get the answer
we
multiply the average Italian's weight (iii pounds) by 4 and divide the result (444)
number,
To
by
3,
which
gives us the hearts-and-minds-winning factor
148.
save the hearts and minds of Italy
we would have
drop 148 pounds per year per Italian, of whom there are about 55 million. This means we would have to drop 8. 14 billion pounds of bombs or, to put it
more manageably, auout 4
million tons.
"All very well," the taxpayer will say, "but
Here Mr. Richardson's
The
to
what
will
it
cost
me?"
figures are helpful.
63,000 tons dropped on Laos in three month~
he reported,
cost $99.2 million, or $1,574 P^r ton.
Cambodia 82,000
In
tons were dropped at a cost of $15^
5
million,
or $1,945 per ton. In short,
cents a
pound
Of
it
to
costs 97 cents a
bomb
pound bombing
much
cost
to
bomb Cambodia,
but only 79
Laos.
the two countries,
nomically and has
pound
Cambodia
is
relatively
more advanced eco-
the larger population. Thus,
must increase
it
appears that per-
in proportion as size
and economic
complexity of the target country increases.
The bombing of Italy, which is much more advanced than Cambodia and much more populous, might cost as much as $2.50 a pound. At
this price
the 4 million tons needed to save
Italy's
hearts and minds
one year would cost slightly over $20 billion. Expensive perhaps, but who would say it is not worth it to save Venice for the free world? These figures may improve taxpayer morale, for they give a clear idea of the useful tasks performed with the money we pay our Governfor
ment. If,
ably 1,266
tell
for
example, you have paid taxes of $1,000, you
yourself that your contribution has
pounds of bombs
(at
made
it
may
very reason-
possible to drop
79 cents per pound) on Laos, thereby saving
Russell Baker
the hearts and minds of 10 and 53/58ths Laotians for a whole year. takes 116
mind will
bomb pounds
301 (It
per year, remember, to save a single heart and
there.)
With figures like these, you do not have to ask your country what it do for you. You can tell Laos and Cambodia what you have done for
them.
Art Buchwald SAVING PAPER
They've been trying to keep shortage in Washington.
A
it
a secret, but there
strike
a serious paper
is
of Western paper workers, which
is
expected to be taken up by workers on the East Coast, has caused a
paper
deficit in
ing
a secret
it
Washington. The reason the government has been keepis it
fears that if the
different departments ers
might resort
not turned
One
to
and agencies
some very
word
gets out, panic will set in
will start
dirty tricks to
and
hoarding paper, while oth-
ensure that
memo
its
flow
is
off.
department, which
shall
remain anonymous, got wind of the
shortage and has already held 27 meetings on the
At the
last
meeting
it
was decided
crisis.
to alert
employees to the
all
situation.
In a
memo, which was
director wrote: "It has
been brought
paper shortage
a serious
sent to the agency's 27,500 workers, a deputy to
in the next
my
we can expect
attention that
few months, which could affect
productivity and the morale of this agency. Therefore,
even
one
to conserve every sheet of paper possible,
dire
emergencies as using both sides of the paper.
I
I
am
if it
am
asking every-
involves such
also requesting
employees to submit to me in writing how the agency can conserve paper. These suggestions should be made out in triplicate with one copy for me, one for your supervisors and one to keep for yourself in case any all
action
is
taken.
"Supervisors are requested to submit weekly reports to the istrative
how many employees are following this memorandum has increased or decreased the use of
Supply Office
directive,
and
if this
present supplies.
If
Admin-
as to
an employee does not send
in a suggestion, his or
her
Art Buchwald
303
supervisor must put in writing to the personnel director failed to
2-D
do
The personnel
so.
director will evaluate
why he
or she
and report on Form
whether or not the excuse is valid. "What we plan to do with the suggestion is have the public affairs division compile a collection of the most interesting ones, which will to his superior
then be distributed to
personnel
all
— not only from
this
agency but from
corresponding agencies, which find themselves in the same shortfall position.
"It
my hope
is
eral Printing Office
been appointed
that this compilation can be published by the
and sold
and the report should be on
Each department head
steering
committee has
methods of distribution,
as well as costs,
to the public.
to study the best
A
Gen-
my
desk by the early part of next month.
will receive a
copy of the report comments
as
well as additional thoughts.
"To
facilitate
matters on the book project,
it
is
suggested that
all
departmental correspondence concerning conservation be submitted on yellow 8 X 10
Memorandum
distribution be written
not have these colors
room by "It is
filling
out
Sheets (G-234 forms), while those regarding
on the blue double carbon pads (K-677). If you do in stock, you can obtain them from the supply
Form
2323.
goes without saying that this agency
unable to supply the documentation to
will
justify
be out of business
the written decisions
makes. Therefore, everyone from the top agency
room personnel must comply with
all
if it
officials to
it
the mail-
regulations regarding the conser-
vation of our paper supply.
"The not receive
first it
of these regulations
is
now
being distributed.
in a week, please notify this office
If
you do
on Green Form
1456,
using the White No. 10 envelope.
"Anyone who does not have
Green Form 1456 may apply for a written waiver by using the Manila Folder 10-DC in which this memo is being distributed." A. Clancy, Acting Chief Deputy Counsel, Paper
—
Conservation Committee.
a
Kenneth Tynan JUST PLAIN FOLKS
The
curtain has just fallen
(Royal Court).
It
on William Faulkner's Requiem
for a
Nun
has been performed with imposing devoutness by Ruth
Ford, Bertice Reading, Zachary Scott and John Crawford.
The produc-
Tony Richardson) and the settings (by Motley) have been austerely hieratic. Let us now imagine that there steps from the wings the Stage Manager of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town." Pulling on a corntion (by
cob pipe, he speaks. S.M.: "Well,
folks,
reckon
that's
about
it.
End
of another day in the
Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi. Nothin' much happened. Couple of people got raped, couple more got their teeth kicked in, but way up there those faraway old stars are still doing their old cosmic criss-cross, and there ain't a thing we can do about it. It's city of Jefferson,
pretty quiet
walk.
Down
now. Folk hereabouts get
to
bed
early, those that
behind the morgue a few of the young people are
nigger over an open
fire,
but
I
guess every town has
up asleep
its
can
still
roastin' a
night-owls,
and
anybody else. Nothin' stirring down at the big old plantation house you can't even hear the hummin' of that electrified barbed-wire fence, 'cause last night some drunk ran slap into it and fused the whole works. That's where Mr. Faulkner lives, and he's the fellow that thought this whole place up, kind of like God. Mr. Faulkner knows everybody round these parts like the back of his hand, 'n most everybody round these parts knows the back of Mr. Faulkner's hand. But he's not home right now, he's off on a trip round the world as Uncle Sam's culture ambassador, tellin' foreigners about how we've got to love everybody, even niggers, and how integration's bound afore long they'll be tucked
like
—
Kenneth Tynan to
happen
in a
305
few thousand years anyway, so we might
haste slowly. Ain't a thing
we can do about
{He takes out
Along about now the good
his
make
just as well
it.
watch and consults
it.)
around
folk of Jefferson City usually get
to
screamin' in their sleep. Just ordinary people havin' ordinary nightmares, the
way most of us do most of the
time.
(An agonised shrieking
is briefly
heard.)
Ayeah, there they go. Nothin' wrong there that an overdose of Seconal won't
fix.
{He pockets
his watch.)
and botherin' over simple, eternal problems. Take this Temple Stevens, the one Mr. Faulkner's been soundin' off about. 'Course, Mr. Faulkner don't pretend to be a real play-writer, 'n maybe that's why he tells the whole story backwards, 'n why he takes up so much time gabbin' about people you never met and what's more, Like
I
say, simple folk fussin'
—
ain't
going to meet. By the time he's told you what happened before you
got here,
it's
be time to go home. But we were
gettin' to
Temple. Ain't nothin' special about accident
— witnessed
a killin'
—
Got
talkin'
about
mixed up in an auto got herself locked up in a sportin' house her.
herself
—witnessed another — got hermarried up bore couple of Then, run with blackmailer, her maid Nancy — the nigger dope-fiend she met the cathouse — notion murder her baby boy. That's about Temple — run of bad luck could happen anyone. with one of these seck-sual perverts self
a
'n
off
fine kids.
a
takes a
to
just a
all
don't
come
askin'
Faulkner, she does
Seems
just's she's fixing to
that's
in
And
killin'
me why Nancy
to
it
that
murders the
to
kid.
keep him from bein' tainted by
Accordin' to Mr. his
mother's
sins.
me
even an ignorant nigger would know a tainted child was better'n a dead one, but I guess I can't get under their skins the way Mr. Faulkner can. to
{He glances up at the
sky.)
Movin' along towards dawn in our town. Pretty soon folks '11 start up on that old diurnal round of sufferin' and expiatin' and spoutin' sentences two pages long. One way or another, an awful lot of sufferin' gets done
around here.
'Specially
'cause they don't feel
it
by the black like
we
folk
—
'n that's
how
it
should be,
do, 'n anyways, they've got that simple
primitive faith to lean back on.
{He consults
his
watch again.)
Well, Temple's back with her husband, and in a couple of minutes they'll
—
be hangin' Nancy. Maybe that's why darkies were born to keep white marriages from bustin' up. Anyways, a lot of things have happened since the curtain went up to-night. Six billion gallons of water have tumbled
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
3o6
over Niagara Falls. Three thousand boys and
marijuana,
'n a
puppy-dog
in a flyin' coffin
girls
took their
first
was sighted over Alaska. Most
of you out there've been admirin' Miss Ruth Ford's play-actin', of you've been wonderin' whether she
room
or whether
maybe she
left
didn't have
puff of
'n a
few
her pay-thos in the dressing-
any to begin with. Out
in Hol-
lywood a big producer's been readin' Mr. Faulkner's book and figurin' whether to buy the movie rights for Miss Joan Crawford. Right enough, all over the world, it's been quite an evening. 'N now Nancy's due for the drop.
(A thud offstage. The Stage Manager smiles philosophically.)
Ayeah,
that's
it
—
right
on time. (He re-pockets
That's the end of the play, friends.
those of you that push dope.
his watch.)
You can go
Down
in
out and push dope now,
our town there's a meetin' of the
Deathwish Committee, 'n a fund-raisin' rally in aid of Holocaust Relief, 'n all over town the prettiest gals're primping themselves up for the big There's always somethin' hap— Miss Cegenation of Why — over the schoolhouse an old-fashioned-type humanist
beauty prize penin'.
1957.
at
just shot himself.
You
{He
get a
A
good
rest, too.
Good-night."
sound of Bibles being thumped momentarily fills the air.)
exits.
Thomas Meehan *
YMA DREAM
which I have had on the night of the full moon for the past three months, I am giving a cocktail party in honor of Yma Sumac, In this dream,
the Peruvian singer. This
is
strange at once, for while
in a
dream,
She and
matter.
it I
I
room of my apartment, on and we are getting along famously.
are in the small living
Charles Street, in Greenwich Village, I
have unbounded
have never met Miss Sumac, and, seems unlikely that I should be giving her a party. No
admiration for four-octave voices,
even
I
have told her several of
my
Swedish-dialect stories, and she has recip-
rocated by singing for me, in Quechua, a medley of
Andean
folk songs.
Other guests are expected momentarily. I have no idea, however, who any of them will be. Miss Sumac is wearing a blue ball gown and I am in and tails. Obviously, despite the somewhat unfashionable neighborhood and the cramped quarters of my apartment, it is to be a pretty swell affair. In any case, I have spread several dishes of Fritos about the room, and on what is normally my typing table there is a bowl
white
tie
of hot glugg.
The
doorbell rings.
astonished delight,
is
A
guest!
I
go to the door, and there, to
Ava Gardner. This
is
going to be a
bit
of
my
all right, I
think.
"Tom,
darling!" she says,
embracing
me
warmly.
"How wonderful
of you to have asked me."
my waking hours, unfortunately, I have never met Miss GardIn my dream, though, my guests seem to know me rather intimately, In
ner.
while, oddly,
none of them seem
to
know each
other. Apparently
it is
common affection for me that has brought them to Charles For my part, although I immediately recognize each guest as he
their strong Street.
or she arrives,
I
have no memory of having ever met any of them,
or, for
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
3o8
them to a party the dream, however. "Miss Ava Gardner," I Miss Yma Sumac." "Charmed," says Miss Sumac. that matter, of having invited
my
in
apartment.
say, "I'd like
you
On
with
to
meet
"Delighted," counters Miss Gardner.
"Ah, but Tom," says Miss Sumac, with an enchanting laugh (which runs up the scale from
on
of
this
by the
all
that
we may
We
C above high C),
I
quickly
all
Typical Peruvian friendliness,
"Ava, Yma,"
to
"let
us not,
occasions, be formal. Por favor, introduce each guest only
name, so
first
— amigos."
E above middle C
I
become
— how
shall
I
say?
and reintroduce the two.
think,
say.
around for some time, sipping gliigg and munching Fritos. Things seem to be going well. The doorbell rings again. The second guest is a man Abba Eban, the former Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations. Again I make the introductions, and, bowing to the wishes of the guest of honor, keep things on a first-name basis. "Abba, Yma; Abba, sit
—
Ava,"
I
say.
Sumac nor my two other guests see anything amusing in the exchange. We chat. The bell rings again, and I am pleased to find Oona O'Neill, Charlie Chaplin's wife, at the door. stifle
I
She
is
alone.
Abba,"
I
Yma; Oona, Ava; Oona,
bring her into the room. "Oona,
are standing in a circle now, smiling brightly but not talking
much.
I
to
The
wright.
I
say.
We life.
a grin, but neither Miss
sense a slight strain, but the party
A
bell again. It
bit hurriedly,
I
is
another
introduce
Ava; Ugo, Oona; Ugo, Abba,"
Miss
Sumac
Boredom?
Thirst?
gives
me
I
man
him
is
young and may
— Ugo
Betti,
to the circle.
yet
come
the Italian play-
"Ugo, Yma; Ugo,
say.
an enigmatic glance that
I
try to interpret.
No, she looks almost irritated. Hastily, I replenish everyone's glass. For some reason, I begin to hope that no other guests have been invited. The doorbell rings once again, however, and I open the door on two lovely actresses, Ona Munson and Ida Lupino. This gives me a happy inspiration for my introductions. "Ona and Ida," I say, "surely you know Yma and Ava? Ida, Ona Oona, Abba. Damn! It doesn't come out even. "Ida, Ona Ugo," I finish lamely. I have scarcely given Miss Munson and Miss Lupino their first
—
drinks
when
faced as
I
I
am
again
usher in the
summoned new arrival,
—
"
to the door.
the young
My
guests stand stony-
Aga Khan. He
exceptionally well turned out in a dinner jacket with a plaid
bund. Smiling too cheerfully, "Folks,"
I
say, using a
word
I
I
is
looking
cummer-
introduce him to the waiting group.
have always detested, "here's the Aga Khan!
Thomas Meehan
309
—
You know." But there is silence, so I must continue. "Aga Yma, Ava, Oona, Ona 'n' Ida, Abba n' Ugo." The Aga Khan and Mr. Eban, I notice, take an immediate dislike to
each other, and
my
party.
I
begin to
I
game
suggest a
an unmistakable
feel
of charades. This
has
now
totally vanished.
When
turns and glares at the door.
I
I
know,
"Ilya,"
I
say,
all
is
open
earlier affection for
me
—
and discover another pair Ira Ehrenburg, the Russian novelist. The it
quite a man-of-the-world, so
"why don't you
glacial looks
the doorbell rings this time, everybody
Wolfert, the novelist, and Ilya latter,
descending over
met with
is
from everyone, including Miss Gardner, whose
pall
just
new approach. and Ira? You know
try a
I
introduce yourself
these lovely people, don't you?"
"Nyet," says Mr. Ehrenburg. "Can't say that
"Oh,
Ona,
Ida, I
all
right,"
I
say. "Ilya, Ira, here's
I
do."
Yma, Ava, Oona.
Ilya, Ira
Abba, Ugo, Aga."
ask Miss
Sumac
She
to sing for us.
refuses.
We continue with the
and some hopelessly inane small talk. Mr. Eban and the Aga Khan stand at opposite sides of the room, eyeing each other. I begin to wish I'd never given the goddam party. Ona Munson jostles Ugo Betti's elbow
gliigg
by accident,
spilling his drink.
I
spring forward to put
my
whipping a handkerchief from
them
at their ease,
pocket. "Never mind!"
I
"No
cry.
damage done! Ugo, you go get yourself another drink. I'll just wipe this gliigg off the, uh, riigg." The guests fix me with narrowed eyes. At this moment, Eva Gabor, the Hungarian actress, sweeps through the door, which I have cleverly left open. Unaware of the way things are going, she embraces me and turns, beaming, to meet the others. Inevitably, I must make the introductions. I start rapidly. "Eva, meet Yma and Ava and Oona " But then I find that Miss Gabor is pausing to hug each guest in turn, so I am forced to make the remaining introductions sepa-
—
rately.
"Eva, Ona; Eva, Ida; Eva, Ugo; Eva, Abba; Eva,
Ilya;
Eva,
Ira;
Eva, Aga."
This
is
a terrible party. All the
a circle, glowering at
oddly
one another.
men have bunched I
up.
can think of nothing
We
stand in
to say.
I
feel
hemmed in, like a man who is about to be stoned to death. "Am I late?" asks the actress Uta Hagen gaily as she comes tripping
into the
room.
"No, no!"
I
say, gallantly taking
her arm and steering her at once
toward the punch bowl and away from the others. "Please have the
common
decency
to introduce
another," says Miss Sumac, in a cold monotone.
your guests to one
"And
in the
proper
manner." In the dream,
Yma Sumac
seems
to
have some kind of hold over
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
310
me, and
must do
I
as
she wishes. "O.K., O.K.,"
Yma; Uta, Ava; Uta, Oona; Uta,
Ilya;
Uta,
Ira;
snap
I
crossly. "Uta,
Uta, Ona; Uta, Ida; Uta, Ugo; Uta, Abba;
Uta, Aga; Uta, Eva."
I
turn to see
if this
has placated
Miss Sumac, but she coldly ignores me. I have begun to hate her. Then I discover that the gliigg has run out, and I am forced to offer my guests rye-and-y-Up. In the hope that no further close the door.
down my
spine.
The I
bell rings instantly,
pretend not to hear
company
will arrive,
however, and
I
I
silently
feel a chill
run
it.
"Answer the door," Miss Sumac says peremptorily. My circle of guests moves menacingly toward me. With a plummeting heart, I open the door. Standing before me, in immaculate evening dress, is a sturdy, distinguished-looking man. He is the Polish concert pianist Mieczyslaw Horszowski.
"Come been so glad
And
in,
Mieczyslaw!"
to see
anyone
here, always,
in
I
cry, with tears in
my whole
my dream
ends.
life!"
my
eyes. "I've never
Stanley Elkin BERNIE PERK EXCERPT FROM
Among
the guests in the studio
They
break.
talked excitedly to
along the row of theater seats
The Dick Gibson Show
all
hell
broke loose during the station
one another, and
called
back and forth
like picnickers across their tables.
Though
they had nothing to say themselves, Behr-Bleibtreau's people turned
back and forth trying to follow the conversation of the others. Indeed, there was a sort of lunatic joy in the room, a sense of free-for-all that was not so
much an
exercise of liberty as of respite
temporarily released
England
as
them from vows. School was out
Dick had an impression of its
New
—
states that
also being out
if
someone had
in Studio A,
throughout the two or three
could pick up the show.
He saw
people raiding
refrigerators, gulping beers, grabbing tangerines, slashing slices
and
of bread, ravenously tearing chicken wings,
margarine on
jellied
handfuls of
leftover stews.
Pepper Steep had joined Jack Patterson in exhausted detachment; though he said nothing, Mel Son looked animatedly from one to the other. Behr-Bleibtreau also
Of
He
the
members
seemed exhausted.
of his panel, only Bernie Perk seemed keyed up.
jabbered away a mile a minute, so that Dick couldn't really follow
all
know what had happened
to
that he was saying.
The
druggist wanted to
everyone. "What's got into Pepper?" he asked. "What's got into Jack?"
Dick couldn't tell him. He had no notion of what had gotten into his comrades. All he knew was that he was impatient for the commercial to be finished and for the show to go back on the air. He couldn't wait to hear what would happen next, though having some dim sense of the
masquelike qualities of the evening, and realizing that thus
far his guests
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
312
had "performed" in the order that they had been introduced, he had hunch that it would involve Bernie. It
a
did.
Bernie Perk: May I say something? Dick Gibson: Sure thing. Bernie Perk: Okay, then. What's going on here? What's got into everyone? What's got into Pepper? What's got into Jack?
I
But all himself. Everyone is
tonight to talk about psychology with an expert in the
anyone's done so far
is
grab the limelight for
came here
field.
Once a person gets started talking about himself all sorts of things come out that aren't anybody's business. I understand enough about human nature to know that much. Everybody has his secret. Who hasn't? We're all human beings. Who isn't a human being? Listen, I'm a mild person. I'm not very interesting, maybe, and I don't blow my own horn, but even someone like too excited.
"Doc" to one and another, could put on a regular horror show if he wanted
myself, good old Bernie Perk, corner druggist,
"Pop" to.
to
But
it isn't
Look,
people
my
s
business.
son and his charming wife are guests in the studio
tonight. Pepper Steep's sister for
them when an intimate
is
here.
How
do you think
relative sticks his foot in his
must be mouth? If
it
you love people you've got to have consideration. Dick Gibson: Bernie, don't be so upset. Take it easy. Bernie Perk: Dick, I am upset about this. No, I mean it. What's it supposed to be, "Can You Top This?" Dick Gibson: Come on, Bernie Bernie Perk: Because the temptation is always the one they yielded to. To give up one's secrets. La. La la. The soul's espionage, its secret papers. Know me. No, thank you. I'm pretty worked up. Call on Mel.
Dick Gibson: Bernie Perk: Dick Gibson: Bernie Perk: hangs a
Take it easy. Call on Mel. Mel? {no answer) Mel passes. {He giggles.) Well, tale,
I
bet.
The
truth
something, maybe everybody
down. They don't know. illusion
is
we're mates.
We
is
that's too bad, for
Well, okay,
I'll
tell
likes to see his friends
the audience
with their hair
don't see each other off the
You want
thereby
air.
The
us to be, but we're not.
Jack Patterson: Here goes Bernie. Bernie Perk: {fiercely) You had your turn.
You were
first.
Don't hog
Stanley Elkin
You had your
everything.
313
canned ardor, don't
better than that
you couldn't do any
turn. Just because
try to ruin
it
for
everyone
else.
The
truth of the matter
teacher. Big deal.
He
sees
is, I
had
up coeds'
to laugh.
The man's
Big deal.
skirts.
He
a school-
has them
he goes over their papers with them, he bends over the composition and her hair touches his cheek. Enomious! in for conferences,
Call the police, passion's circuits are blown. all
But
that.
a drugstore.
if
you want
You
No wonder they in
on the
life
in the raw,
know
that,
I
know
meat market. Hickory Dickory "Doc." Let me fill you
register us.
It's
a
Yow. Wow.
prescription.
those crowded
all
be a pharmacist, buy
wouldn't believe what goes on.
You know what down
to see
I
a drugstore
is?
A
temple to the senses.
Cosmetics
Come
stop.
Powders, puffs, a
verb-wheel of polished nails on a cardboard,
lipstick ballistics,
aisles.
creams and tighteners, suntan
first
lotions,
eyeshadow, dyes for hair
love potions, paints, the ladies' paintbox!
Come, come with
The Valentine candy, the greeting cards, the paperbook racks and magazine stands. The confessions and movie magazines dated two months beyond the real month because time, confections
in
like love,
— banana
the sweet, as
Pop.
if
is
splits
sweetness
them. The names
yet to be. Sit at the fountain. See the
—
and ice-cream sundaes
itself,
like
like statues
of
the sugary molecules of love resided
words for
lyrics.
Delicious the syrups,
the salty storm of nuts and tidal waves of spermy cream. Sing yum!
Sing
yum yum! All the
temed sy's ries,
shampoos,
all
the lotions and hair conditioners pro-
egg and meat. Files and emery boards, the heartsick gyptools. Sun lamps, sleep masks, rollers, bath oils and depilatoas
massaging
lotions.
Things
for acne,
panty hose
— the model on oils
and shower
Venus Folding Feminine
Syringe, of
the package like a yogi whore. Brushes, rinses, bath caps like the fruits that grow on beaches.
To
say nothing of the
Kotex in boxes you could
set a table for four on.
Liquid douches
Rubber goods, the queer mysterious elastics, supporters, rupture's ribbons and organ's bows. Now we're into it, hard by diarrhea's plugs and constipation's triggers. There's the druggist, behind the high counter, his bust visible like someone on a postage stamp, immaculate in his priest's white collar. See the symbols the mortar and pestle and flasks of colored liquid. Once I sipped from the red, the woman's potion. I had expected tasteless you can hear the
—
sea.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
314
was sweet, viscous, thick those flasks to float your heart.
vegetable dye, but aphrodisiacs in
And
it
as oil.
There are
am, by the refrigerated drugs, the druggist's small safe, the pharmacopoeia, the ledger with names and dates and numbers. A man of the corner and crossroads, scientist manque, reader of Greek and Latin, trained to count, to pull a jot from a tittle, lift a tittle from a whit, a man of equilibriums, of grains and there
J
half-grains, secret energies locked in the apothecary's ounce.
Fresh from college
another man's
store.
macy, eeyi eeyi
o!
An
I
took a job
—
this
was the Depression
—
in
MacDonald's. Old MacDonald had a pharold joke but the first I ever made. "I'll fill the
MacDonald told me. "You're a whipper-snapper. on trade and make the ice-cream sodas. If that isn't
prescriptions,"
You'll wait
go elsewhere. If I'm to be sued for malpractice I'll be the malpracticer, thank you very much." It was not satisfactory, but what could I do? It was the Depression. How many young men trained for a profession had to settle in those days for something satisfactory,
else? I
And do you know what
I
found out? (What's got into Bernie?)
found out everything!
week I stood behind the counter, smiling in my white lab jacket, and a lady came in. A plain woman, middle-aged, her hair gone gray and her figure failing. "Doctor, I need something for my hemorrhoids," she said. "They are like to kill me when I sit. It burns so when I make number two that I've been eating clay to
The
first
constipate myself."
Two
gave her Preparation H.
I
days later she
the store and bought a birthday card for her son.
came back
Somehow
to
the
knowledge that I alone of all the people in the store knew something about that woman's behind was stirring to me. I was married, the woman was plain; she didn't attract me. I was drawn by her hemorrhoids, in on the secret of her sore behind. Each day in that novice year there were similar experiences. I had never been so happy in my life. Old MacDonald puttering away in the back of the
—
up front what a team we made. A young woman came in. Sacrificing her turn she gestured to me to wait on the other customers first. When the store was empty she came up to me. store,
I
"I I
have enuresis," she
gave her some
pills.
"Listen," she said, I
let
her
said.
"may
come behind
I
use your toilet?"
the counter. She minced along slowly,
her legs in a desperate clamp.
I
opened the door of the small
toilet.
Stanley Elkin
"There's no toilet paper,"
"Thank you," she I
I
315
said. "I'll
have to bring you some."
said.
stood outside the door for a
moment.
I
heard the splash.
A
powerful, incredible discharge. You'd think she'd had an enema.
woman's bladder was converting every spare bit of moisture into uremic acid. She could have pissed mud puddles, oceans, the drops in clouds, the condensation on the outside of beer bottles. It was beyond chemistry, it was alchemy. Golden. But
was
it
all
urine; the
Lovely. I
got the paper for her.
"I
just
have the
enough
toilet tissue.
me
for
to
Miss."
hand the
Though
roll in to
she opened the door
her,
I
saw bare knees, a
tangle of panties.
Her name was Miss Wallace, and when she came into the need is beyond embarrassment: only / was emstore for her pills barrassed I grew hard with lust. I made no overtures, you under-
—
—
stand;
I
was always
"Listen,"
I
always professional, always offhand.
clinical,
told her
one day,
"I
suppose you have rubber
sheets."
"No good," she
said.
"You'll ruin your mattress." "It's
already ruined.
When
I
collected in the depression under
tried a
my
rubber sheet, the water
behind.
I
lay in
it
all
night
and caught cold." The thought of that pee-induced cold maddened me. Ah God, love tokens, the bizarre body awry, messes caught in underwear
—
unhealth a function of love.
There were so many I can't remember them all. I knew I had to leave Old MacDonald. I was held down, you see. Who knew what secrets might not be unlocked if I could get my hands on the prescriptions those ladies brought in! When my father died and left me four thousand dollars, I used it to open the store I have now. I signed notes right and left to get my stock and fixtures together. My wife thought it was madness to gamble this
way
in the
depth of the Depression, but
There were so many
.
.
I
was pining with
love.
.
These have been a few of the women in my life: Rose Barbara Hacklander, Miss Hartford of 1947, 38-24-36, a matter of public record. What is not a matter of public record is Let's see.
that she
had
gingivitis, a terrible case,
almost debilitating, and
came
because of her reluctance to smile. She wanted to shield her puffy gums, you understand. Only I, Bernie near to losing the
title
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
3l6
On
Perk, her druggist, knew. to
me
lip,
in tears.
She showed
reluctant as a country
raising the
hem
of her
skirt,
came
the night before the finals she
me
—
in the
—
lifting a
the Broadway producer's office
girl in
shy,
back of the store
and yet bold
even with the shame of her beauty.
too,
wanting to please
looked inside her mouth.
I
The
gums were filled, tumid with blood and pus, enormous, preternatural, the gums of the fat lady in the circus, obscuring her teeth, in seeming actually
their sheathing effect
of blade in her mouth.
back of the trigger
squeezing
"Wait,
I
I
cried,
nerves
It's
"what
—
I
will
know
I
it's
do?
It's
at the
one gathers
in a
worse tonight.
The
as
nerves."
head here. Say
can't see in this light. Put your
"Ah," she
it
mouth
cysts like snowflakes.
"Oh, Doc," she salve don't help.
sharpen them, two rings
there, in the back of her
store, pulling a cheek,
— cankers,
"Ah,"
And
to
"
'Ah.'
said.
said.
"Ah!"
"What's to be done?
Is
there anything you can give me?"
"Advice."
"Advice?"
"Give them the Gioconda smile
And
she did.
I
Mona
saw the photograph
ing after the finals. Rose Barbara
holding her flowers, the
girls in
in
them have." the newspaper the mornLisa let
crowned
(I
the Queenmaker),
her court a nimbus behind her,
openly smiling, their trim gums flashing. Only Miss Hartford of 1947's lips
were locked, her secret
her sealed smile.
I still
Do you know out of
it?
for sleep?
in the
dimpled parentheticals of
have the photograph
in
my
wallet.
means to be always in love? Never to be Each day loving's gnaw renewed, like hunger or the need what
it
Worse, the love unfocused, never quite reduced to
this
one woman, but always I, the King of Love, taking to imagination's beds whole harems? I was grateful, I tell you, to the occasional Rose Barbara Hacklander for the refractive edge she lent to lust. There were so many. Too many to think about. My mind was like the waiting room of a brothel. Let them leave my imagination, I prayed, the ones with acne, bad breath, body odor, dandruff, all those whose flyed ointment and niggered woodpile were the commonplace of my ardor. Grateful also to Miss Sheila Jean Locusmundi who had corns one
girl
or that
like Chiclets, grateful to
the corns themselves, those hard outcrop-
pings of Sheila Jean's synovial bursa. heeled, her long,
handsome
legs
I
see her now, blonde, high-
bronzed
in a
second skin of nylon.
Stanley Elkin I
give her foot plasters.
317
She hands them back. "Won't do," she
says.
"Won't do? Won't do? But these are our
These are the
largest.
largest there are."
"Pop," she whispers, "I've got a cop's corns."
A
A
my
head in wonder. I want to see them, Sheila Jean. I invite her behind the counter, to the back of the store. If I see them I might be able to help her, a doc like me. Once out of view of the other customers Sheila Jean cop's corns.
succumbs: she limps.
cornucopia.
/ feel
shake
I
the pinch. That's right,
I
think, don't
them see. In my office she sits down in front of my rolltop desk and takes off her shoes. I watch her face. Ease comes in like the
let
high
tide.
Tears of painless gratitude appear in her eyes. All day she
moment. She
waits for this in
her stockings.
wriggles her toes.
hard for
It's
me
my
my
to maintain
tance. "Take off your stockings, Miss
see bunions bulge
I
professional dis-
Locusmundi,"
I
manage. She
and I hear the soft, electric the nylon. She swings around, and redundantly points. turns away in
"I see,"
They
are.
swivel chair
murmur.
I
hiss of
They
"Yes, those are really something."
are knuckles,
They
ankles.
mountain
are boulders,
ranges.
"May She
I?"
I
gives
ask.
me
her foot reluctantly. "Oh, God, don't touch
them. Pop." "There, there. Miss Locusmundi, her narrow instep,
hand
my palm
a stirrup.
I
won't hurt you." toss
I
I
hold
casually from
it
one
to the other, getting the heft.
"Ticklish," Sheila Jean says. I
There
peer is
down
closely at the
a sour odor. This,
tastes like.
I
nod
I
I
giggles.
humpy
think,
judiciously;
up
She is
callosities, their
dark cores.
what Miss Hartford's
gingivitis
take their measure. I'm stalling be-
When
can,
sculpt plasters for
cause
I
her.
daub them with Derma-Soft and apply them. When she walks
I
out she
can't stand
is,
to
all
girl
whose
finally
I
I
eyes but mine, just another pretty face.
Grateful too
anese
yet.
—
I
thank her here
ears filled with wax.
— I
to
Mary Odata,
a
I
Jap-
bless her glands, those sweet
secretions, her lovely auditory canal. Filled with wax, did
was a candle mine.
little
I
say?
She
saved the detritus from the weekly flushings
I
administered.
Her she wrote
father took her to live in Michigan, but before she
me
a note to thank
me
for
all I
left
had done. "Respected R.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
3l8
Ph. Perk,
brother I
am
"
she wrote,
whom
going
nesses to
"my
father have selectioned to take
me to
his
has a truck farm in the state of Michigan, but before
this
is
to grateful
my humble
acknowledgment your thousand kind-
ears. In
my
heart
I
know
will
I
never to find
Michigan an R. Ph. as tender for my ears as you, sir. Mine is a shameful affliction, but you never amusemented them, and for this as for your other benefits to me I thank. Your friend, M. Odata." When I closed the store that night I went into my office and molded a small candle from the cerumen I had collected from her over the months, ran a wick through it, turned off the lights, and reread Mary's letter by the glow of her wax until it sputtered and went out. Call me a sentimental old fool, but that's what I did. Not to mention Mrs. Louise Lumen, perpetual wet nurse, whose lacteal glands were an embarrassment to her three or even four years beyond her delivery, or flatulent Cora Moss, a sweet young thing with a sour stomach in the draft of whose farts one could catch cold. There were so many. There was Mrs. Wynona Jost whose unwanted hair no depilatory would ever control. Her back, she gave me to understand, was like an ape's. Super-follicled Mrs. Jost! And psoriatic Edna Hand. And all the ladies with prein
scriptions.
yet
it
I
knew everybody's
was never the
worm
secret, the secret of every body.
in the apple
I
And
loved but only a further
and final nakedness, almost the bacteria itself, the cocci and bacilli and spirilla, the shameful source of their ailment and my privilege. I was deferential to this principle only: that there exists a nudity beyond mere nudity, a covertness which I shielded as any lover husbands his sweet love's mysteries. I did not kiss and tell; I did not kiss at all. Charged with these women's cabala I kept my jealous counsel. I saved them, you see. Honored and honed a sort of virginity in them by my silence. Doc and Pop. And knight too in my druggist's gorget. I could have gone on like this forever, content with my privileged condition, satisfied to administer my drugs and patent medicines and honor all confidences, grateful, as I've said, for the impersonal personality of the way I loved, calling them Miss, calling them Missus, protecting them from myself as well as from others, not even masturbating, only looking on from a distance, my desire speculative as an issue of stock.
But something human happens. Where's my son going? Why's he leaving? EdOne day ward? Connie, don't go. Youth should have a perspective on its parents Well, they've gone. I must have shamed them. Isn't .
.
.
.
.
.
Stanley Elkin
919
way with the young? They think the older generation is stodgy and then they've no patience with confession. Oh well, let them go. Where was I? that the
—
Behr-Bleibtreau: "One day Bernie Perk: Yes, that's right.
One day a woman came into my drugstore
never seen before. She was pretty, in her early or middle twenties perhaps, but very small. Not just short though she was, exI'd
—
tremely short; she couldn't have been
but small. Dainty, you know?
know
Maybe
much more
than
she wore a size
five feet six dress.
I
She could probably buy her clothes in the same department school girls do. What do they call that? Junior Miss? Anyway, she was very delicate. Tinier than Mary Odata. A nice don't
sizes.
face, sweet, a
in
little
old-fashioned perhaps, the sort of face you see
an old sepia photograph of your grandmother's
A very pretty
little
sister that died.
woman.
saw her looking around, going up and down the aisles. Every once in a while she would stoop down to peer in a low shelf. I have these big round mirrors in the corners to spy on shoplifters. I watched her in the mirrors. If I lost her in one mirror I picked her I
up again in another. A little doll going up and down the aisles in the convex glass. I knew what was up. A woman knows where things are. It's an instinct. Have you ever seen them in a supermarket? They understand how it's organized. It has nothing to do with the fact that they shop more than men. A man goes into a grocery, he has to ask where the bread is. Not a woman: she knows where it's supposed to be. Well, this woman is obviously confused. She's looking for something which she knows is always in one place, whatever store she goes into. So I knew what was up: she was looking for the sanitary napkins.
Most ladies
places they keep
embarrassment.
I
them on the open
shelves to spare the
don't spare anyone anything.
behind the counter with me.
I
want
They have to ask. she came over to me.
know
to
I
keep them
what's going
on with
their periods.
Finally
"This
"I
don't see the Kotex," she says.
the Kotex department,"
and reach under the counter for a box. "Will there be anything else? We have a terrific buy on Midol this week. Or some girls prefer the formula in this. I've been getting good reports; they tell me it's very effective against cramps." I hand her a tin of Monthleaze. "How are you fixed for is
I
say,
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
320
breath sweetener?"
push a tube of Sour-Off across the counter
I
to
her.
my
She ignores looks at
it.
"This
is
"I'm sorry,"
I
up the box of Kotex and
suggestions but picks
Junior," she says. say.
give her Regular.
I
"Don't you have Super?"
thought
"I
she asks
this
was for you,"
her,
tell
I
and give her the
size
for.
A month
later
she
came
"Super Kotex," she
in again.
said.
I
and don't see her again for another month. This time when she comes in I hand her the Super and start to ring up
give her the box
the sale. "I'd better take
the box
I
the
tampon kind
too," she says.
She examines
give her. "Is there anything larger than this?"
"This
the biggest,"
is
I
say, swallowing hard.
"All right."
"Tell
me,"
I
you?"
say, "are these for
She blushes and doesn't answer. hadn't dared to think about
I
Now
mind. This
girl
I
could think of nothing
female
else.
inflamed me. Bernie burns.
My life
small.
though
it,
It
I
it
had crossed
my
forgot about the others.
was astonishing
—
a girl so
centered on her center, on the prodigious size of her
parts.
Behr-Bleibtreau: Say "cunt."
Dick Gibson: Wait
a
Behr-Bleibtreau:
It's all
Bernie Perk:
Cunt. The
.
.
.
minute right.
Say "cunt."
astonishing to me. Kotex and
Kotex
inside.
I
did
know
it.
result of her largeness. It
from the
rest
I
Tampax. For
was
as
if
of her body, or that by
of.
had to know about her, whether she was married. I tried
who
I
knew, she used the
now
as the
her largeness there sapped size
some
incredible compensation I
don't know.
It
was
all I
Bernie burns.
I
band, but
all
disproportion was
conceived of her smallness
her petiteness lent dimension elsewhere. could think
The
size of her cunt.
at least find
to recall
could think of fingers,
if I
who
out
who
had seen
she was, a
wedding
could think of hands?
Bernie burns. Perk percolates.
I
That night I counted ahead twenty-eight days to figure when might expect her again. The date fell on September 9, 1956. She didn't come not then, not the next month. Then, one afternoon, I saw her in the street. It was just after
—
Stanley Elkin
Thanksgiving, four or
"Did you have
hat.
five
days before her next period.
a pleasant holiday?"
her but she couldn't place me.
iar to
"So so." The
321
I
I
asked.
My
counted on
I
raised
my
face was famil-
this.
want to embarrass me. "I thought you might be going away for Thanksgiving," I said. She looked puzzled but still wanted to be polite. "My roommate went home but I stayed on in Hartford," she said. "Actually
me
she invited
little
darling didn't
my
to go with her but
boss wouldn't give
me
Friday
off."
Ah,
I
thought, she has a roommate, she's a working
girl.
Good. "I'm very sorry,"
I
said,
"but
I
find myself in a very embarrass-
seem to be able to remember your name." "Oh," she said, and laughed. "I can't remember yours either.
ing position.
I
I
don't
know we've seen each
other."
"I'm Bernie Perk."
—
Of course. I'm Bea Dellaspero. I still don't don't either. You see what happens? Here we
"Yes. "I
are,
two old
and neither of us can Wait a minute. I think I've got it. seen you in my store. I'm the druggist Perk's Drugs on Mu-
friends I've
—
tual?"
"Oh." She must have remembered our last conversation for she became very quiet. We were standing outside a coffee shop, and when I invited her to have a cup with me she said she had to be going and hurried off. Her number was in the phone book, and I called right from the coffee shop.
If
only her roommate's
in,
I
thought, crossing
my
fingers for luck.
"Where's Bea?
Is
Bea there?"
"No." "Christ,"
said.
I
"What's her number
at
work?
I've got to get
her."
number the roommate gave me; it was a big insurance company. I told them I was doing a credit check on Bea I
called the
Dellaspero and they connected
me
to personnel. Personnel
was
nice as pie. Bea was twenty-four years old, a typist in the claims
department and a good credit risk. It was something, but I couldn't
live
on
it.
I
had
to get her to
return to the store. I
conceived the idea of running a
printer set
up
a
sale especially for Bea.
sample handbill. Across the bottom
I
My
had him put
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
322
dozen simple coupons, with blank spaces where she could write in the names of the products she wanted to exchange them for. She could choose from a list of twenty items, on which I gave about a 90 percent discount. I sent the flier in an envelope to Bea's in half a
address.
Normally I'm closed on Sunday, but that was the day I set aside for Bea's sale. I opened up at ten o'clock, and I didn't have to wait more than an hour. When she came in holding the pink flier
we were alone
"How
in the store.
are you?"
I
asked.
"Fine, thank you."
She was
uneasy about me.
still
got your
"I
advertisement." "I see
your hand."
in
it
"Oh. Yes." She went around the store picking up the items she wanted and brought them to the counter. When she gave me her coupons, I saw that she'd chosen products relating to a woman's periods or to feminine hygiene. She'd
had
to:
I'd
rigged the
list
with men's
shaving equipment, pipe accessories, athletic supporters
— things
like that.
"What
size
would these
be,
madam?"
"Super."
"Beg pardon,
I
didn't hear you."
"Super" Super duper, I thought. I put the big boxes on the counter and added two bottles of douche from the shelf behind me. It won't be enough, I thought. She had a pussy big as all outdoors. Imperial gallons wouldn't be enough. "Let me know how you like the douche," I said, "I've been getting some excellent reports."
God,
I
was crazy. You know how
was
Smitten?
I
sudden
was
cotton
Send I
I I
in love.
for
in love for the first
all
when
you're smitten.
Married twenty-three years and time in
would have placed between her
me
it is
my
legs.
the corks in Mediterranea,
all
life.
Ah
Whole
love, set
of a
all
bales of
me
styptic stymies
tasks!
would
fetch!
In love, did
I
say? In love? That's wrong. In love
I
had been
Old MacDonald's. In love is nothing, simple citizenship. Now I was of love, no mere citizen but a very governor of the place, a tenant become landlord. And who falls in love? Love's an ascent, a since
rising
— touch my hard-on —
spots haired by imagination,
a soaring. Consider
my
fats
my
body,
all
bald
rendered and features firmed,
Stanley Elkin
323
tooth decay for God's sake turned back to candy in
Heyday! Heyday! And
all
my
my mouth.
feelings collateral to a teen-age boy's!
had been in love and now was of it. Bernie burns, the pharmacist on fire. I did not so much forget the others as repudiate
So
I
them; they were
just
more
wives.
Get
this straight: love
is
adulter-
on the character. I cuckold those cuties, the Misses Odata and Locusmundi. Horns for Miss Hartford! Miss Moss is dross. Be my love, Bea my love! I bagged Bea's purchases, punched the register a few times to make it look good, and charged her fifty-seven cents for the nineous, hard
teen dollars' worth of stuff she'd bought.
"So cheap?"
my
"It's
off a
special get-acquainted offer,"
I
said.
"Also
I
knocked
few dollars because you mentioned the secret word."
What was
"I did?
"I can't tell
you.
"You know,
more people
it's
it?" It's
really a terrific sale," she said. "I'm surprised
aren't here to take advantage of
"They're coming by I
a secret."
when church
it."
gets out."
see.
As she took the two bags in her thin arms and turned to go, it occurred to me that she might never come back to the store. I raced around the counter. I had no idea what I would do; all love's stratagems and games whistled in my head. "I'll
"I
help you,"
I
said, taking
one of her
bags.
can manage."
"No,
I
couldn't think of
it.
A little thing like you? Let me have
the other one as well."
She refused to give it up. "I'm very capable," she said. We were on the sidewalk. "You better go back. Your store's open. Anyone could just walk off with all your stock." "They're in church. Even the thieves. I'll take you to your car. "I don't
have a
car. I'm
going to catch the bus
at the
corner."
"
"I'll
wait with you.
"It's
not necessary."
"It isn't safe."
"They're
all
in
church."
"Just the thieves, not the rapers."
"But
it's
catch cold."
the dead of winter.
You
don't even have a coat. You'll
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
324
"Not cold." "What?" "Not cold. Bernie burns." "Excuse me?" "Not cold. The pharmacist on
m sorry?
1
"Don't worry about me,"
down
my
with the bag in
strong.
I
huff and
said.
I
"I'm hale."
arms. "See?"
puff."
I
Me sick? There
"Me?
fire."
are things
said.
jumped up and
"See
how
hale? I'm
myself in the chest with
hit
I
I
I
my
on
Bea was becoming alarmed.
I
my
fist.
shelves to cure anything."
checked myself, and we stood
quietly in the cold together waiting for the bus.
Finally love's
had
I
naught so sweet
as
"
young dream,' I said. "What was that?" "It's a saying. It's one of my "Oh." "
'Who
"It's
ever loved that loved not at
"I've
'Love
smoke raised with the fume of sighs.' " The fume of 'Take away love and earth is tomb.' 'Love indeed is
is
anything, yet think
"I
"
heard that one."
super. "
"
see the bus coming?"
'Love makes the world go round.'
"
" first sight?'
another saying."
"Do you "
favorite sayings."
beg your pardon?"
"I
size:
to speak or burst. " 'There's
I
"
nothing.'
is
hear
it
coming. Are you sure you can't see
blind,' "
it?"
She had heard it; it lumbered toward us irresistibly. Soon it would be there and I would never see her again. She was very nervous and went into the street and began to signal while the bus was still three blocks off. I watched her performance disconsolately. " 'And yet I love her till I die,' "
'Love
I
is
murmured
When
said gloomily.
softly.
the driver
handed her bag
I
came
to her. "Will
Bea darted up the see you again?" I said.
abreast, I
steps
and
I
"What's that?" "Will
see
I
you again? Promise when you've used up what
you've bought you'll "Well,
it's
fingertips.
back."
so far," she said.
"Z deliver!"
my
come
I
shouted
The
after her
driver closed the door.
and waved and blew
kisses off
Stanley Elkin
325
Dick Gibson: Remarkable! Bernie Perk: So's love, so are lovers. Now I saw them. Dick Gibson: Saw whom? Bernie Perk: Why, lovers. For if love is bad for the character it's good for it too. Now that I was of love, I was also of lovers. I looked around and saw that the whole world was in love. When a man came in to pick up penicillin for his wife that was a love errand. I tried to cheer him. "She'll be okay," I told him. "The pills will work. She'll come round. Her fever will break. Her sore throat will get better." "Why are you telling me this?" he'd ask. "I like you," I'd
—
say. " 'All the
world loves a lover.'
For the
first
time
I
"
saw what
my
moments
drugstore was
all
about.
It
would read the verses on my greeting cards, and my eyes would brim with tears. Or I would pore over the true confessions in my magazine racks. "Aye aye,"
was
I'd
way
love's
station. In free
I
mutter, "too true this true confession."
I
blessed the lipstick:
droned over the little torpedoes. "Free the man in frogs and bogs. Telltales be gone, stay off shirt collars and pocket handkerchiefs." All love was sacred. I pored over my customers' photographs after they were developed. I held a magnifying glass
"Kiss, kiss,"
over them
I
— the ones of sweethearts holding hands
in the national
on the steps of historic buildings, the posed wives on the beach, fathers waving goodbye, small in the distance, as they go up the steps into airplanes. People take the same pictures, did you parks or
know
that?
We are all brothers.
Love was everywhere, commoner than loneliness. I had never realized before what a terrific business I did in rubbers. And it isn't even spring; no one's on a blanket in the woods, or in a rowboat's bottom, or on a hayride. I'm talking about the dead of winter, a high of twenty, a low of three. And you can count on the fingers of one hand the high-school kids' pipe-dream purchase. My customers meant business. There were irons in these lovers' fires. And connoisseurs they were,
I
tell
you, prophylactic
guard, their
condoms counters and
thing, they'd
want
ticity,
to
more
confections.
know, or handle them,
that one's friction.
Or
tactic
How
than safe-
sheer's this
testing this one's elas-
inquire after refinements, special mer-
They wanted: French Ticklers, Spanish Daggers, Swedish Surprises, The Chinese Net, The Texas Truss and Gypsy Outrage. They wanted chandise, meticulous as fishermen browsing
petroleum
And
jellies I,
smooth
Pop,
all
flies.
Let's see.
as syrups.
love's
avuncular
spirit, all
smiles, rooting for
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
326
them, smoothing their way where
I
could, apparently selfless
— they
must have thought me some good-sport widower who renewed his memories in their splashy passion giving the aging Cupid's fond green light. How could they suspect that I learned from them,
—
growing
my
convictions in their experience? Afterward, casually,
I
would debrief them. Reviewing the troops: Are Trojans better than Spartans? Cavaliers as good as Commandos? Is your Centurion up to your Cossack? What of the Mercenar>? The Guerrilla? How does the Minuteman stand up against the State Trooper? In the end, it was too much for me to have to look on u hile e\ery male in Hartford above the age of se\enteen came in to buy my condoms. Bea never came back I had frightened her off with my wild talk at the bus stop yet my love was keener than ever. I still kept up my gynecological charts on her, and celebrated twent\-eighth days like sad festivals. I dreamed of her huge vaginal landscape, her
—
—
loins in terrible I
formed
made my
cramp. Bernie burns.
The
a plan.
first
step
was
roommate.
to get rid of her
Bea that night. Don't worn.-. It's not what you think. I didn't disguise my voice or breathe heavily and say nothing, nor any of your dirty-old-man tricks. I'm no phone creep. When Bea answered I told her who it I
was
first call
to
straight off.
"Miss Dellaspero? Bernie Perk.
anymore. You took advantage of
I
my
don't see you in the drugstore
come
bargains but you don't
m. Embarrassed, she made a few vague excuses which tended cleared matters up. "Well
thought \ou weren't
You
can't put a
In a
week
guy I
satisfied
in
jail
for
that's okay,
then,"
I
I
pre-
said. "I just
with the merchandise or something.
worrying about his business."
called again. "Bea? Bernie."
This time she was
prett>' sore.
"Listen," she said. "I never
heard of a respectable merchant badgering people to trade with him.
I
was
when you
a little flustered
the right to trade wherever
I
called last week, but
This
is
have
want.
"Sure you do, Bea. Forget about call.
I
that.
That was
a business
social."
"Social?"
"That's right. versation in
I
got a
I
thought
little
I
I'd
worried.
"I'm not sick."
how you are. After our last conyou. Then when you didn't come
called to ask
be seeing I
thought you might be sick or something."
Stanley Elkin
"I'm relieved to hear don't see
"I
why my
it.
That
327
my
takes a load off
mind."
health should be of any concern to you."
"Bea, I'm a pharmacist. to inquire after the health of
against the law for a pharmacist
Is it
one of
his
customers?"
"Look, I'm not your customer."
"Your
up
a
little
privilege, Bea.
no crime
trade. Well, as long as you're
tant thing. If
A
It's
we
few days
for a
man
all right.
I
drum
That's the impor-
haven't got our health, what have later
to try to
we
got?"
called again. "Bernie here. Listen, Bea, I've
been thinking. What do you say
to
dinner tonight?
I
know
a terrific
steakhouse in West Hartford. Afterward we could take in a
late
"
movie.
"What? Are you crazy?" "Crazy?
I
Why do
don't get your meaning.
you say something
like that?"
"Why do
I
say that?
Why do
"Well, I'm calling to invite
man
is
it
you call up all the time?" you to dinner. Where does have dinner with him?"
young lady to "I don't know you." "Well, sure you know me, but even
can't invite a
illegal for a
person to
try to
if
you
make another
say a
it
didn't, since
when
person's acquain-
tance?"
"Don't
call
anymore."
"I'm sorry you feel that way, Bea."
"Don't
call
me
Bea."
name, isn't it? You don't drag a person into court for saying your name. Even your first name." "I don't know what your trouble is, Mr. Perk "Bernie. Call me Bernie. Bernie's my first name." "I dorit know what your trouble is, Mr. Perk, but you're annoying me. You'd better stop calling." She hung up. "That's your
—
I
telephoned the next night.
"My
trouble, Bea,
is
that
I
think
I'm falling in love with you."
want to hear this. Please get off the line." "Bea, dear, you don't lock a fellow up for falling in love. "You're insane. You must be at least twenty-five years older than I am." "There is a difference in our ages, yes. But they don't arrest "I don't
"
people for their birthdays."
She hung up.
My plan was
going according to plan. "Bea?"
THEBESTOF MODERN HUMOR
328 "I
thought
convinced you
I
me."
to stop calling
"Bea, don't hang up. Listen, don't hang up.
ni
just
have to
you
call
"What is It?" "One of the reasons
you're hostile
anything about me. That's not for that.
bilit>-
I
what
again. Listen to
my
fault,
ha\e to say."
>ou don't know don't take any responsi-
is
I
I
that
thought you'd come into the store and gradually
we'd learn about each other, but you didn't uant
when
you hang up
If
it
that \\ay. Well,
he doesn't stand on ceremonies. I'm going few things about myself.
a person's in love
you a "That can't make any difference." " 'That can't make any difference.' Listen to her. Of course it can make a difference, Bea. What do you think love between two people is? It's knoMing a person, understanding him. At least give me a chance to explain a few things. It's not a federal offense for a to
tell
fellow to
tr>-
"I'll
to clear the air. All right'"
you
give
"Gee,
I'd
a
minute."
better talk fast."
"You'd better." "I
said
want
to be honest with you.
w^as twent>-fi\e years older
I
You
weren't far off
than you
are.
As
when > ou
matter of
a
fact,
I'm even older than you think. I've got a married son twenty-six years old."
"You're married?"
"Sure I'm married. Since when
My
wife's
when is
I
name
is
it
a
crime to be married'
Barbara. She has the same
say I'm married
I
two years older than
zip has
is
I
gone out of her
you do. But mean that technically I'm married. Babs am. A woman ages, Bea darling. .All the
figure.
initial
Menopause does
that to a
girl.
Ill
you the truth: I can't stand to look at her. I used to be so in love that if I saw her on the toilet I'd get excited. I wouldn't e\en wait for her to wipe herself. Now I see her in her corsets and I uish I were blind. Her hair has turned gray down there. Do \ou know what that does to a guy?" "I'm hanging up." tell
—
"I'm telling the truth. Where's
when someone I
tells the
it
written
it's
police business
truth?"
sent over a carton of Kotex and a carton of
Tampax, and
\ou get the napkins?" don't want them.
called her the following week. "Did
"
"I didn't
order those.
"Order?
Who
I
said anything
about order?
You
can't arrest a
Stanley Elkin
man
329
sending his sweetheart a present.
for
It
wouldn't stand up in
court."
And
the next night.
"It's
you,
is
it?
I'm moving," she said. "I'm moving and I'm
number. I hope you're satisfied. I've lost my roommate on account of you. You've made her as nervous as me it's your with these calls. So go ahead and say whatever you want getting an unlisted
—
"
last
chance.
"Come
out with
me
tonight."
"Don't be ridiculous." you."
"I love
"You're insane."
want to make love to come over and see you naked. I want to know just
"Listen, go to bed with me. Please.
me
you.
Or
let
how
big
you
I
down there." do you know that? You need
really are
"You're
sick,
help."
"Then help me. Fuck me." "I actually feel sorry for
you.
I
really do."
"What are you talking about? I'm not hiding in any bushes. You know who I am. You know all about me. Vm Bernie Perk. My place of business is listed in the Yellow Pages. You could look me up. It isnt a crime to proposition a woman. You can't put a man behind bars
"You
for trying."
disgust
me."
"Call the police."
"You
disgust
me."
them out." Her threat about an unlisted number didn't bother me: a simple call to the telephone company the following afternoon straightened that out. I gave them my name and told them that Bea had brought in a prescription to be filled. After she'd picked it up I "Press charges. They'll throw
had misread it and given her a dangerous overdose. I told them that if I were unable to get in touch with her before she took the first capsule she would die. And they'd better give me her new address as well so that I could get an ambulance to her if she'd already taken the capsule and was unable to answer discovered that
I
the phone. Love always finds a way! I
gave her time to
some of her confidence
back. Then, a
her
new apartment and
week
later
—
—
I
get
couldn't wait
was getting pretty close to her period I took the package had prepared and drove to Bea's new address. Her name on the
longer: I
settle herself in
it
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
330
box had been newly stenciled on
letter
name
lose, the last
initials
darling
— you know how
single
or last names: the poor dears don't realize that
dead gi\eaway h\o
little
big cities tn- to protect themselves by disguising their sex
girls in
with
only, the
a shiny black strip of cellu-
flights
— along with her apartment number.
it's
a
walked up the
I
and knocked on her door.
"Yes?"
"Mr. Giddons from Tiger's." The building was managed by Tiger's Real Estate
and
there's actually a
Mr. Giddons who works
there.
"What do you uant'"
"We have want
to
a report there's
check the walls
in
some
structural
damage
in 3-E.
I
your apartment."
She opened the door, the trusting m love and war. "What do you want?
little
cupcake.
"It's
you."
" 'All's fair
"I'm berserk."
I
said,
"amok with
love. If
you scream
I'll
kill
"
you. I
can
moved
into the
room and
closed the door behind me.
say? In the twentieth centur\ there
I
pened, so ni
tell
is
no
disgrace.
It
What hap-
you.
pushed her roughly and turned my back to her while I pulled on the rubber. As I rolled it on I shouted threats to keep her in line. "One false move and HI kill you. I've got a knife. Don't go for the unlisted phone or 111 slit you from ear to ear. Ill cut your pupick out. Sta> away from the vsindow. No tricks. I love you. Bernie burns, the pharmacist on fire. Don't double-cross me. If I miss you with the knife HI shoot your head with m>- bullets. At last it was on. Still with my back to her I ordered her to stand still. "Don't make a move. If you make a mo\ e 111 strangle you with m\- bare hands. Don't make a move or you die. I'm wearing a State Trooper. They re the best. I'm smearing K-Y Petroleum Jelly on me. Ever\"I
"
thing the best, nothing but the best.
.All
right.
"
I
said,
"almost
have to take this box of Kleenex out of my package and the aerosol douche. I'm unfolding the \'enus Folding Feminine Syringe. There: these are for you. \o\r." I turned to
through.
I
just
her.
"Mv Godl"
I
said.
She had taken
off her dress
and brassiere and had pulled down
her panties.
"Oh God,
"
I
gasped.
"It's
so bzg.'"
Stanley Elkin
want you
'i didn't
"But your
your
legs,
my
to rip legs,
331
clothes," she said softly.
are so thin!"
"Pipestems."
"And your poor
frail
arms."
"Pipecleaners."
"But
my God,
Bea.
Down
there!
Down
there you're magnifi-
cent!"
saw the vastnesses, the
I
pubes, the swollen
majora
mons
was her
tropical rain forest that
like a freshly
like a great inverted gorge,
made
the lush
Indian tumulus, labia
pudendum.
"Fantastic!" "I've the vulva of a giantess," she said sadly. I
reached out and hid
my
hands up
to the wrists in her pubic
touched her I felt myself coming. "Oh, Jesus. Oh, Jesus. I love you 00 00 00!" It was over. The sperm made a warm, independent weight in the bottom of my State Trooper. It
As soon
hair.
swung
Oh
as
I
— — —
me like a third ball. "Oh God," I me just catch my breath. Whew.
against
my. Let
"Oh
sighed.
dear.
Holy Cow! Great
Scott!
"Okay," at
I
your mercy.
said in a
How
few moments, "now you
can you throw a
man
me. I'm in the hoosegow when didn't jump out at you listen to
you know as much about him as you do? I from an alley or drag you into a car. Look" I turned my pockets "I'm not armed. There's no knife. I don't carry a gun. inside out These hands are trained. They fill prescriptions. Do you think they could strangle? Granted I threatened you, but I was afraid you'd
—
—
scream. Look
at
it
this
way.
I
ing out in the neighborhood.
was protecting you. You're It's
a first-class building.
just start-
Would you
Look at the douche. Everything the best that money can buy. And what did it come to in the end? I never even got close to you. To tell you the truth I thought it might happen just this way. It's not like rape. I love you. How can you ruin a man who loves you? I'm no stranger. You know me. You know my wife's name. I told you about my son. I'm a grandfather. Take a look at these pictures of my grandchildren. Did I ever show you these? This one's Susan. Four years old want
and
a
a scandal?
little
And
didn't
I
take every precaution?
imp. Boy, does she keep her parents hopping!
And
this
Greg. Greg's the thoughtful one. He'll be the scholar. Are you going to put a grandfather in jail? You got me excited. Perk peeks. is
The pharmacist again.
I
had
in flames.
to, just this
I
love you, but
once. Give
me
I'll
never bother you
a chance.
It
would break
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
332
my wife's
heart to find out about me. Okay, they'd try to hush
and maybe the grandkids would never hear about
my
it,
it
up
but what about
son? That's another story.
you something else. You re the last. A man's first woman is special, and so's his last. He never gets over either of them. And how much time do you think I have left? You saw how I was. I can't control it. I've had it as a man. I'm through. Give me a break, Bea. Don't call the police. I love you. I'm your friend. Though I'll let you in on a secret. I'd still be your friend in jail. All I really wanted was to see it. I still see it. I'm looking now. No, I'll tell
"I'll
be honest: staring. I'm staring because it,
and
never
I
want
will.
to
remember
it
never seen anything
I've
Not
forever.
like
that 111 ever forget.
I
Never."
was weeping. Bea had started to dress. "There are jokes," I said when I'd regained control, "about I
men on
motorcycles disappearing inside women, or getting
There's this one about a rabbi married to a to
be
really fabulous.
bedroom where the bedspread,
all
One
woman
rabbi's wife
taking a nap. She's lying
is
naked except where
would happen one day. The rabbi but
I
"I didn't
never
will again.
scream," she
who's supposed
day the cleaning lady comes into the she's
said,
on the
covered her genitals with
the rabbi's skull cap, and the maid says, 'Oh,
like that,
lost.
fell in.' I
my God,
used to laugh
I
knew
it
at stories
You're so beautiful." "because
it
was
my
fate."
"What?" "People find out about me. In high school, in gym, the
girls
would see me in the shower, and they'd tell their boyfriends. Then the boys would humiliate me. Worse things were done than what you've done. We had to leave town. In the new high school I got a note from the doctor so that I could be excused from gym, but they still found out. Maybe someone from my old town knew someone in the new town, maybe the doctor himself said something I don't know. Boys would take me out and want to see. When I graduated I moved away and started all over in a different state. There was a boy ... I liked him. One day we made love and he told. It was terrible. I can't even wear a bathing suit. You know? Then I came to Hartford. And you found out. I didn't scream because it was my fate. At least you say you love me "Adore you," I said. She said something I couldn't quite hear. "What was that?"
—
.
.
.
—
—
Stanley Elkin "I said
it's
my
burden. Only
it
333 carries
me.
It's
ready
we made
I
held her
love.
like that for
me
if I
were
and eman hour, and when I was
always on horseback," she cried, and rushed toward
braced me, and
as
Bruce Jay Friedman THE LONELY GUY'S APARTMENT
At college, he was quite shy with women. His approach was to say "Hi there," tell the woman his name and then say: "Some day I would like to have an apartment overlooking New York City's East
He
River."
sponded
could not
one instance in which a
woman
re-
to this technique.
A Lonely Guy's him
recall
best friend
is
his apartment.
Granted, there
is
no way
for
chuck it under the chin and take it to a Mets' game. But it is very often all he has to come home to. Under no circumstances should he have an apartment that he feels is out to get him. One that's a little superior. An Oscar Wilde of an apartment. No Junior Studio will ever throw its arms around the Lonely Guy and say: "It's gonna be all right, babe." But it should at least be on his team. Perhaps not a partner on life's highway, but somewhere in his corner. If you are a brand-new Lonely Guy, the chances are you have just been thrown out and have wound up draped over the end of somebody's couch. Either that or you have booked a room in an apartment-hotel for older folks who have Missed Out on Life. There will be a restaurant in this kind of hotel where people take a long time deciding if they should have the sole. You don't want to become one of those fellows. As soon as you get movement back in your legs, try to get your own place. Many Lonely Guys will settle for a grim little one-roomer in which all they have to do is lie there everything being in snatching distance of the bed contact lens wetting solution, Ritz crackers, toothpicks, Valium, cotton balls, etc. This is a mistake. No Lonely Guy can thrive in an apartment that comes to an abrupt ending the second he walks through to put his
—
arms around
it,
—
Bruce Jay Friedman the door. There
is
335
no reason why he should have
to go to the
zoo
for a
change of scenery. Or stand in the closet. The Lonely Guy in a oneroomer will soon find himself tapping out messages to the next-door neighbors or clutching at the window guards and shouting: "No prison bars can hold me." It's important to have that second room even if it's a little bit
of a thing and you have to crawl into
The
best
way
to
it.
smoke out an apartment is to check with your know someone who has seven months to go on a
Everyone will lease and wants to sublet. Someone who's had a series shot out from under him. But this may not be the best way to go. Living in an apartment with seven months remaining on the lease is like always waiting for the toast to come up. Try to get one with a decent amount of time remaining, eighteen months or two years, so you can at least feel it's worth it to get your Monterey Jazz Festival posters on the wall. friends.
Rental agents can be useful, except that they tend only to handle
apartments with wood-burning
fireplaces. If
you say you don't want one,
you get marked down as an uncharming fellow who didn't go to acceptable schools. The tendency of the new Lonely Guy will be to grab the first place that looks better than a Borneo Death Cell, just so he can get off the street. He doesn't want to make a career of looking at vacant apartments which
have other people's old noodles in the sink. It will be worth your while to hold out, to contain your retching just a few days longer and ask yourself these questions about any apartment before you snap
it
still
up:
How Is It for Taking Naps?
Lonely Guys take a tremendous amount of naps. They are an important weapon in the fight to kill off weekends. Before renting an apartment, make sure it has good nap potential. You might even want to borrow the keys from the rental agent, lie down and test-nap
it.
What Would
Be Like to Have Bronchitis In? Bronchitis, that scourge of the Lonely Guy. Call up any Lonely Guy you know and he's likely to be in the last stages of it. (Lonely Guys don't wash their vegetables.) But it's an excellent test: Is this the kind of place I'd want to have It
Bronchitis in or would
I
feel ridiculous?
What About Noise? Tomb-like
silence
is
not always the
ticket.
It
Guy to sit around listening to his own The sound of an eminent chest specialist
can be dangerous for a Lonely pulse.
Some
noises aren't bad.
with a persistent hacking cough can be amusing. But isn't a
named Haughty Felice whose specialty and hurling them into play dungeons.
lady above you
up stockbrokers
make
sure there is
chaining
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
336
"Get
Dwight, and
in there,
Nothing
is
more
my
worshipping
start
stiletto heels."
unsettling than to hear a commodities expert rat-
handcuffs at four in the morning.
tling his
Want This Apartment Waiting for Me When I Get Back from San Francisco? The Lonely Guy may often be sent to San Francisco to
Do
whip
I
a sluggish
branch
office into shape.
never be anyone waiting
The
a clutch situation.
at the
When
he returns, there
terminal to hail his arrival. This
well-traveled Lonely
Guy
deals with
ing back his tears and impatiently shouldering his
crowd, pretending he's got to catch a connecting
it
is
will
always
by hold-
way through the
flight to
Madrid.
Still
he gets out of the airport at one in the morning, and there isn't a wonderful apartment waiting for him, all warmed up and ready to go, that could be it, right there, ring-a-ding-ding, into the toilet for
and
if
all,
good. Is It
Over-Priced?
since he was a
little
exhaust fumes.
(2)
The Lonely Guy
tiny
Lonely Guy:
(1)
Never kneel down
to inhale bus
second one. All
terrific apart-
Keep the rent down.
time to take another look
It's
has been taught two things, ever
at that
ments are over-priced. The only ones with low rents are downwind of French restaurants that didn't get any stars at all in dining-out guides. When it comes to rent, it's probably best to cut down on other things, like molar insurance, and pay through the nose, if that's what it takes to get a winner.
you have
to live
apartment.
There
is
On
on Milk Duds. Or
Remember,
much rent that always mad at your
the other hand, don't pay so
it's
that you're
not the apartment's fault that
nothing the apartment can do about
it.
Can
it's
it
expensive.
help
it
if it's
great? Is
This Apartment Really
when
Me?
That's the Big One. Freud told his
came to making major decisions they should listen to their "deep currents." You might find an apartment that would be just right for the early struggling Gore Vidal. Or for Harry Reasoner right now. But does it have your name on it? Listen to your deep apartment followers that
it
currents on this one. Ferenczi, a disciple of Freud's, listened to his and
admittedly committed suicide. But not before he'd enjoyed
months
in a
charming
little
many happy
duplex in Vienna.
In sum, you need a great apartment.
There
will
be times
when
it
will
be
just
against the World.
Get yourself a stand-up apartment. Here are some more apartment insights:
You and Your Apartment
Bruce jay Friedman
337
ONE GREAT FEATURE Before you sign the lease,
—
make
sure the apartment has at least one
sunken living room, smoked mirrors so that when you are walking around aimlessly, you can stop suddenly and say: "Jesus, look at those smoked mirrors. And they're all mine, special feature
—
until the lease
is
a natural brick wall, a
up." That one
Then you can go around
terrific
feature might even be a dignitary.
saying: "I've got a
place in the
little
same
building as John Travolta's dermatologist."
TERRACE
TIPS
The Lonely Guy with a decent income should terrace. The most important thing about a terrace screwed on
tight.
A
of
lot
them
is
to
make
sure
it's
and are never reported because
off
fall
himself a
try to get
people are too embarrassed, the way they used to be about rapes.
Along with the
terrace,
essential to get a
it's
Monkey
Deflector.
Many big-city buildings have South American diplomats living in them who keep monkeys that will swing in at you. Chileans are especially guilty of this practice.
give
Toto
a
little
They
yogurt"
will insist
— but
if
the
monkeys
are harmless
— "Just
you check with the doorman, you
will
find out they are biters.
Once you have
throw over your adult life to the care of potted flowers. Toss a few pieces of broken statuary out there and tell visitors: "I'm letting it go wild." This will impress women
who have been
a terrace, don't feel obliged to
raised in
Sun
Belt trailer courts.
THE JOY OF LIGHTING
Too much emphasis cannot be placed on the importance of good lighting. The Lonely Guy with an uncontrollable urge to bang his head on the refrigerator may be reacting to sallow, unattractive light. Lighting should be warm and cozy and there should not be too much of it. An excess will remind you that there
you.
Too
room.
A
little will
isn't
anyone wonderful
in there with
have you tapping along the walls to get to the bath-
sure sign that the lighting
is
wrong
is if
you spend a
lot
of time
taking strolls through the building lobby.
Unfortunately, there like
and bring
it
down
is
no way
to the lighting fixture people.
thing as a swatch of lighting.
One
you no such
to tear off a piece of lighting
There
kind not to duplicate
is
is
the harsh.
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
338
gynecological type favored by elderly Japanese like to
service officials
who
spy on their sleeping nieces.
Some
Lighting fixtures are tricky.
glow in the
massage
store,
parlor.
and be prepared It's
civil
cool and elegant
will give off a
and then turn around and make your place look
The
best
to go
that important.
way
to get the lighting right
to
is
like a
experiment
through half a dozen lamps to get the right one.
Some
of the finest light
is
new Luxo and Lonely Guys
given off by the
lamps. Unfortunately, they look like baby pterodactyls,
who've used them complain that their lamps are out to get them. A great kind of lighting to have is the kind they have at a bar you love in San Francisco. Shoot for that kind.
VIEWS
The worst view you can have
is
a bridge, particularly a Lost Horizon
type that's obscured in fog at the far end. In no time at
Guy
all,
the Lonely
metaphor for his life, stretching off into nowhere. Some other things not to have as a view are prisons, consolidated laundries and medical institutes. The Pacific is not so hot either will start
thinking of
it
as a
unless you're into vastness. Interiors of courtyards are tolerable, but will
tend to make you
you should be writing a proletarian novel or at least in some way be clawing your way to the top. The world's most unnerving view is when you can see just a little bit of a movie marquee; the only way to tell what's playing is to stretch all the way out the window while another Lonely Guy holds your ankles. The most relaxing view is the Botswana Embassy. feel
PEOPLE
The Last People
WHO CAN HELP YOU DECORATE
Who
Lived in the Apartment.
don't rearrange anything that was
tenant
been
left
do.
in,
He may even have
Lonely Guy.
The Moving Men. Many have good decorating if
you move
behind. Chances are the previous
knew more about decorating than you
a tasteful
When
they are out-of-work actors.
apartment look
like
A
danger
an Uncle Vanya
instincts are shaky, leave things exactly
is
set.
instincts, especially
that they will
But
if
your
own
make your decorating
where the moving men
set
them
down.
Any Woman Who Worked on
a
Major Film. Invite one over, don't
say a thing and have a normal evening. At
some
point, reflexively, she
Bruce Jay Friedman
move a sconce room explode with
will
or something several inches and you will see a boring loveliness.
Woman at handsome woman The
a
She
339
the
Department
in her fifties
Store.
who
is
Every department store has
assigned to help Lonely Guys.
have a large bosom, generous haunches and will set you to thinking about Dickensian sex with your mother's best friend in front of a hearth. There is no need to seek her out. She will spot you at the door will
of the furniture department. (There
league with the divorce courts and that
Work
her.)
sensibility,
with this
she
woman, though
will see
you
some evidence that she you may have been phoned
is
cautiously.
No
is
in
in to
matter what your
as a craggy, seafaring type out of a late-night
movie ("Dash my buttons if you aren't a handsome-looking sea-calf") and pick your furniture accordingly. Upon delivery, many of her choices will not fit through your front door. Why does she pick out furniture that's too big to fit in? No one knows. She earns no commissions on this
massive stuff that has to go back to the
store. It
may have some-
thing to do with her ample haunches. Get her to try again by
coming on
smaller.
FEAR OF DECORATORS
Many
people are
terrified
of decorators, afraid they're going to be given
widely publicized Bad Taste Awards
if
of the decorator's recommendations.
only" signs on decorator.
all
{a
It's
because of those "to the trade
the good furniture stores. Just once, talk back to a
The experience can be
Decorator
they don't go along with every one
woman
exhilarating.
with orange
hair): I've
thought
over and you're
it
getting Riviera Blinds for your living room.
Lonely Guy: No, I'm not. Decorator {astonished): What? Lonely Guy: You heard me. I hate
Riviera Blinds.
And
I'm beginning
to hate you, too.
Decorator: How about the track lighting I ordered? Lonely Guy: Hate it. Send it back. Decorator {after a pause): You're right on both counts.
get rid of the
I'll
"verticals," too.
Lonely Guy: The
"verticals" stay. I've always
had rather
a fondness for
"verticals."
Decorator
{with
lenging.
new
respect):
You're hard to work for
.
.
.
but so chal-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
340
A
WORD OF CAUTION ON DESKS
Rough-hewn ones made of driftwood, rolltop desks, elegant French ones upon which the first acts of farces were written. The Lonely Guy must be careful not to buy a whole bunch of them; if he does, his apartment will soon look like the city room
The
easiest thing to
buy
is
a desk.
of a scrappy small-city daily.
ASHTRAYS It's
important to have a
lot
commodate smokers. When they
of ashtrays around and not just to accook, most Lonely
to bring the vegetables out in. Certain ashtrays
new kind of vegetable
platter.
The
Guys have nothing
can pass
as a
charming
peas, for example, look just great in a
big bright ashtray.
BOOKSHELVES Books give an apartment a scholarly pipe-smoking
look.
Many
rock-
young women will assume you wrote all the books on your shelves that you were once named Coleridge. Don't overdo it and turn your place into a library. The saddest book story is that of Lonely Gal Eleanor Barry (reprinted in its entirety from The New York Times, December 21, 1977). oriented
—
A 70-year-old woman was pulled out from under a giant pile of books, newspapers and press clippings that had collapsed on her, but she died
The
on Eleanor Barry as she lay in her bedroom, and according to police in Huntington Station, Long Island, the weight of the papers muffled her cries for help. She died Sunday. The police said they had to use an axe to smash the door of the shortly after being rescued.
bedroom because the house was
filled
pile fell
collapsed pile blocked their entry.
They
said that the
with towers of books, newspapers, shopping bags and as-
sorted papers.
THE ENDS OF THINGS It's
important to put some focus on the ends of things
as the
Lonely
Guy will be spending a great deal of time huddled over there in a corner. An investment in a bunch of good strong end tables, for example, will
Bruce Jay Friedman
not be wasted.
It's
341
important, incidentally, to keep couches manageable
and not have them stretching off in the distance. What's the point of being the only fellow on a long freight train of a couch! Other, juicier opportunities for loneliness and isolation will be coming your way. And stay away from Conversation Pits. The Lonely Guy who's rigged one up in size
will
quickly see that he
is
the only one on hand to sound off on America's
lack of a clear-cut natural gas policy.
A TRICKY DECISION
Do you are fiercely
go with overhead mirrors? There is no question that they erotic, especially if you can talk an au pair girl into slipping
under one with you. But what about those nights when you're just a poignant guy staring up at his own hips! The makers of overhead mirrors are conservative and confidence-inspiring, many of them respected Italian-Americans with no connections to the Gambino family. But they cannot absolutely guarantee that an overhead won't come down in the middle of the night and turn you into a whole bunch of Lonely Guys. For
this reason,
it
might be wise to
pass.
PLANTS them. Scattered about, they will cover up the fact that you don't have enough furniture and aren't knowledgeable about room dividers. A drawback is that each day you will see little buds and shoots,
Buy
life
a lot of
perpetuating
on the opposite to
your plants
here
is
my
itself
while yours
side of town.
as
may
They
very well not be.
Buy your
plants
are always cheaper over there. Refer
"Guys." Put your arm around one and
say:
"This guy
avocado."
ROOM FRESHENER Lonely load
Guy
up on room
apartments tend to get a fresheners.
press the aerosol button
The way
bit stale, so
to apply
one
is
it's
important to
to hold
and then streak through the rooms
as
it
aloft,
though
you are heralding the start of the new Olympics. Some of the fumes will flash back and freshen you up, along with the apartment. Many a woman who has admired a Lonely Guy's cologne is unwittingly in love with his
room
freshener.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
342
A SHEET AND BLANKET PROGRAM
One
kind of sheet to be war\' of
is
the elastic bottom one that curls
over the four corners of the bed and supposedly stays there. As soon as
you buy them, they no longer fit. The biggest problem is that they tend to break loose in the night and snap you up in them. Silky, satiny sheets feel good to the skin and will give you an inkling of what it's like to be Bob Guccione. But what you get is a combination of sleeping and ice-skating and there is always the danger of being squirted out of bed. Just buy colorful sheets you like. The time to change sheets is when you can no longer ignore the Grielle and Zweiback crumbs in them. Salesmen will tell you that East German llama blankets are the warmest in the world and are so tightly woven that the thinnest shaft of cold can't sneak in there and get at you. None of this is important. The only way to test a blanket fluffy.
(The sight of
this
is
is
to hold
up
to
your cheek and see
heartbreaking and
saleswomen.) Better to have ten chilly
it
fluffies
weather but has a hostile Cold
War
if it feels
help you in picking up
will
than one llama that holds off feel to
it.
SHOWER CURTAIN MADNESS
The
one that fits right. Shower curtains are either long, flowing things that look like gowns worn by transvestite members of the Austro-Hungarian General Staff, or else they are shorties that will remind you of Midwestern insurance men whose pants don't come down far enough. Bob Dole fans. There is the possibility that the Lonely Guy is incapable of buying any shower curtain at all. And that he will have to wait till Ms. Right comes along. If such is the case, and you plan to go without a shower trick in getting a
curtain, the trick as possible
to let the water hit
is
is
to find
your chest so that
as
much
bankshots back into the tub and doesn't rot your
enough of it floor to the
shower curtain
gets out there,
Lonelv
Guv
you
will
run the
risk
of
tiles.
it
If
of plunging through the
below.
SILVER SEPARATORS
Lonely Guys with mangled hands are usually assumed ans of Iwo. This
is
not necessarily the case.
reaching into kitchen drawers to
tr\'
Too
to get knives
often,
and
it's
to
be veter-
a result of
forks out.
The way
Bruce Jay Friedman
around
On
this
to
is
buy
a silver separator that has
many Lonely Guys would
the other hand,
artery than stand
343
around
filing
rows for utensils.
little
rather sever an occasional
butter knives.*
PICTURES YOU ARE NOT SURE OF
Lonely Guys have a tendency to accumulate paintings they are not quite sure of gifts from dissident Haitians or suburban women who've
—
and moved into Soho lofts. The way to deal with such a painting is to prop it up on a dresser and put stuff in front of a clock, a Fundador bottle, a book about the fall of the once-proud it Zulu nation so that only some of the painting shows through. Make it look as if it's ready to be hung, but that you haven't gotten around to it. (You don't know where the nails are anyway.) That way, if someone admires it, she can push aside the obstructions and say, "Hey, watcha suddenly
—
left their
families
—
got there, fella?" If she hates that stuff in front of
it,
indicating
it,
THE RIGHT
you're covered because you've put
you don't think
it's
all
so hot either.
AIR CONDITIONER
Get a strong, no-nonsense air conditioner that sends the cold air right up the middle at you. A Larry Csonka of an air conditioner. Don't get one in which the air wanders out in a vague and poetical manner so that you have to run around trying to trace it.
THE RIGHT TV SET
The most important something and not out fellow lot
in the
TV
set
is
to get
middle of a room where
tall
sitcom. But don't scattering
skinny sliver of a
make
them about
you can
it
it's
making electronic judgments on you. Odd-shaped
of sense; a
that
thing about a
back against
like a
somber
TV sets make a
TV set can actually spruce up a dying
the mistake of getting a lot of
like leftover snacks.
little
tiny sets
and
Get one solid-looking Big Guy
really dig into.
TV-viewing section with some throw pillows strewn about and a prominent bowl of shelled walnuts may be dismaying but its effects are likely to be calming. to the urbane Lonely Guy
The
prospect of a
little
—
*
Another way
to deal with silverware
wallboard. However, the underweight Lonely
being sucked right up on
it,
is
to slap
Guy
along with the knives.
it
up
in full
view on a magnetic
with a metal watchband runs the risk of
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
344
GAY CLEANING FELLOWS
Now
that you've got your apartment, who's going to clean
Good news
in this department.
Now that Chorus Line is
a
it
up?
smash and has
spawned international companies, there are a lot of dancers who couldn't get into any of them and have become gay cleaning guys. They aren't that easy to find. It isn't as if they advertise conspicuously under names like Joan Crawford Clean-Up and play selections from Gypsy on their answering services. They are usually under an Italian name like Fuccione and Calabrese.
Yet such a macho-sounding company can send over a bright-eyed and cheery gay guy with a handkerchief on his head. The best thing about gay cleaning fellows is that they are not afraid of ovens. They go right after
them,
the
all
way
to the
back end, sponging up the
last
droplet
Gay cleaning fellows also know all about the latest you may have to take a little ribbing about not having
of lambchop grease.
cleaning
Lemon
stuff:
Pledge Dusting
Wax
for
your breakfront.
On
the plus side,
though, they are considerate enough to Leave the Windex to You, the only fun part in
all
The only gay cleaning fellows to be wary Germany who may try to Cross That Line. Unless
of cleaning.
of are ones from East
you don't mind waking up on a Sunday morning to a gay cleaning fellow named Wolfgang who has already started on The New York Times Arts and Leisure Section.
CLEANING FOR POVERTY-STRICKEN LONELY GUYS
Some Lonely Guys apartments.
If that's
are needy,*
and have
your situation, wait
and then get down on your knees and
till
roll
just
up
all
up their own before company comes the dust in the room in to clean
Most of it will come right up, but stubborn dust that refuses to can be dabbed off the floor with a damp palm. Lonely Guys who live around Phoenix and have a sassy Jack Nicholson style may elect to get into dustball fights with another Lonely Guy. a big ball.
THE BIG PICTURE buy anything for your apartment that you can't take along with you. When you batter down a wall to give it an ecclesiastical grotto effect, you may be supplying a free ecclesiastical As a general
'
The
state of
rule, don't
being in a Negative Cash Flow Situation.
Bruce Jay Friedman
345
Guy. Only the strictest interpretation of Maimonides (a biblical Lonely Guy) requires you to do so. The last thing you want to do is put down roots. At a moment's notice, you should be ready and available to pull up stakes and try your luck at being a Lonely Guy in St. Paul de Vence. grotto effect to the next Lonely
Sheed
Wilfrid
FOUR HACKS
Are
all
the blockbusting best sellers written by the same person?
The
necessarily.
fact that
all
their authors give the exact
Not
same interview
should not blind one to exotic varieties of plumage and even character.
For instance. Picture,
New fact
York
—
—
celebrating their latest smasheroos. Their interlocutor
literary
work
at
you will, the worst: four major hacks passing through passing through the same hotel room in the same time if
man
is
a pale
with a business suit and a heartful of hate because he has to
for a living.
The
others look so
much
like
authors you could eat
them. Irving Trustfund dressed in regulation
First,
beads, sucking thoughtfully on his meerschaum.
Did you
read those lousy reviews? Aren't you
poncho and love
How
goes
it,
Ining?
ashamed of yourself
this
famous strained smile. "Dickens and Zola were despised by the critics of their day, you know. I'm happy the real people, that is. Dickens was to leave the verdict to the people time? "Not at
all," says
Irving with his
—
popular for the self-appointed pseudo-intellectuals of the day
just too
don't
mean
you,
sir.
suddenly drenched.
You look He hates
—
poncho is have enormous re-
like a real intellectual." Irving's
to
make enemies.
"I
spect for real intellectuals," he ends miserably.
Now
Peaches Smedley, concocter of sexy gothics, swathed for see-through vinyl. I hear your crap is coming back, Miss Smedley. for
town
in
How
do you account
believe I
my
mean
for this sickening lapse in public taste?
so-called crap
was never
really
gone, Mr.,
er,
"Why,
Snead. People,
the people out there, have always relished a good yarn told at a
crackling pace and with lots of real characters. That's the tradition
place myself in others."
I
— the
robust storytelling tradition of Dickens and,
I
er,
Sheed
Wilfrid Is it true that
your stuff
man
woman
love of a
for a
riously, life-enhancingly dirty.
you think that the
also dirty as hell? "If
is
is
347
Mr.,
dirty,
my
er, yes
stuff
is
myself happen to think that the real
I
pornographers are the munitions makers and the politicians our air and that we shouldn't be ashamed of our bodies." "Effing
A-OK
our
to that, sweetie," says
who
poison
Percy Fang, in cap-
third,
down hard on
hat and Castro fatigues, biting
tain's
dirty, glo-
his
corncob.
"I don't
How much
know why we're wasting time on this money you make last year. Jack? Not
loser
what you people forget about
Dickens every time. The guy was
mad
for the
baby.
artist,
much
as
effing
anyway, Peaches. as Dickens,
I'll
bet. That's
moola. Couldn't get enough of the long green. That's a real
No one
ever wrote a great book in a garret. Charlie
knew
Yet would you believe, Mr. Pale-faced Loser, that the guy the critics went for in those days was a certain Colley Cibber?" that.
Sharply.
What do you know about
Colley Cibber?
Guardedly. "Plenty." Next, Aldershott Twilley, the English hack laureate, half-buried in tweed, puffing on his briarpatch:
"Oh Lord
yes,
how
they hated Dickens.
Because the chap was first and last a born storyteller, you know. They can't stand that. These youngsters today have completely forgotten how to tell a story. They slap down whatever comes into their bally heads, if that's the portion of the anatomy they use, whurf whurf, and expect busy people with real concerns to take them seriously."
By
youngsters,
"Yes, yes, for Stein tittlety
all
I
guess you
that
lot.
Joyce
and Stein?
And as With my Rumpty
Joyce was absolutely potty, of course.
— what's that marvelous limerick about
her:
..."
Peaches Smedley:
"I
happen
have
to
sometimes think of myself a way. Joyce, Flaubert ..."
Joyce. In fact, in
mean
I
as
respect for James
terrific
belonging to that tradition
Jesus.
Trustfund:
"I
happen
to agree wholeheartedly.
Joyce, and from Kafka too and from
all
I
learned a lot from
those great writers.
know why? Do you know what they were
writing about?
And do you They were
writing about people!" Twilley: "Absolutely potty."
Fang: "Joyce that's the
name
Trustfund:
is
A-OK
with me.
of the game.
The
He
sack
is
"I absolutely agree. If
haustibly multifaceted aspects of
Fang: "By sack
I
mean
told
it
where
like it's
it is
in the sack,
and
at for a real writer."
by sack you
mean
all
the inex-
." .
sack.
.
What do you
think Keats was writing
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
348
and Gerard de Nerval and all those guys? S-A-C-K. Ever hear of Gerard de Nerval, paleface? He was pretty far into sex, I hear." Fang has a reputation for turning interviews into shambles at this about,
fella,
point, so the interlocutor changes the subject nimbly.
Hobbies, Ms. Smedley? "Well, people, mostly. For instance, to be interviewing
love
I'd
you right now."
Muttered. You would
was any
be, if there
justice.
Smedley: "And books, of course. I'm never without a book. Bishop
Andrews, Mrs. Gaskell, anything
at all."
Working methods, Mr. Twilley? Twilley: "Well, old Dickens had the answer to that as to so many things. Four, five thousand words a night. Work your arse off, dear boy, it
won't
kill
you."
Trustfund:
Genius
is
modern
"It's true,
a robust flower,
What about
all
and
Joyce
writers to tend to coddle themselves.
the giants
knew
that instinctively."
his four books?
Trustfund: "Well, there are giants and giants of course." Twilley: "Joyce was a bloody
little
you ask me." which is where I'd be myself if
twit
Fang: "He was too busy in the sack,
if
had any sense." Eyes Smedley, who turns away in undisguised horror. Fang is bent on his shambles: it's only a question of time now. Critics, Ms. Smedley? Smedley: "To be frank, I don't read them. They're such sad little I
people. /
So
full
of envy."
read somewhere that bad reviews
Smedley
(uncertainly): "Well, as
I
make you say,
I
cry?
don't read them."
do I. I'm much too busy writing novels myself. " .' you know the old Welsh saying that goes. Those who can, do and those who can't, teach." All (roaring): ". Twilley: "Neither
Do
.
.
Twilley:
.
.
"Oh, you'd heard that one?"
Hobbies, Mr. Trustfund?
Trustfund: "Merovingian porcelains, anything bearing on the Icelandic comic spirit ..."
Working methods, Ms. Smedley? Smedley: "Five or six thousand words
a day.
Work your
arse off."
Twilley: "Dickens."
Trustfund: "Dickens and Zola,
I
tell
you."
Fang (pouncing on Smedley): "Here I come, ready or not." The cat, You re nothing but a pack of cards. You re nothing but which had been Peaches Smedley only a moment before, stares at me .
.
.
Wilfrid
Sheed
349
have been shaking the bejasus out of her ever since I stepped into Jacqueline Susann's looking glass a few weeks back in The Times
levelly.
I
Magazine and had my head straightened out by Hunipty Dumpty. (Incidentally, that guy Lewis Carroll certainly knew how to get out of a dream sequence, and I'd like to acknowledge my debt to him and Theodore Dreiser right now.)
Some
now from
Although hacks vary enormously in quality, such that a Herman Wouk might reasonably reject the title and a Mickey Spillane can barely claim it, they seem to share a certain turbid homogeneity of thought and phrase which perhaps conclusions
a pseudo-elitist.
explains their popularity. Since, by a perfectly respectable craft,
I
me,
straight
hate to see
its
oompapa
storytelling
is
artisans driven to these
must know in their sweetbreads that their line traces from Dumas and Rider Haggard and not from the grand masters of language and social observation and felt madness. Dickens in particular has earned his rest from this kind of monstrosities of defensiveness. At the
same
time, they
talk.
We could
good analysis of the pops in terms of their own function but no more, please, from the hacks themselves: solemn Jack Bennys all, who think that owning a Stradivarius and a townhouse makes you Isaac Stern, and makes of "Love in Bloom" a worthy succescertainly use a
—
sor to Beethoven's "Pastoral"
the West.
and the other
rattling
good tunes that made
Donald Barthelme GAME
Shotwell keeps the jacks and the rubber ball in his attache case and
not allow
me
to play with
them.
He
will
plays with them, alone, sitting
on
the floor near the console hour after hour, chanting "onesies, twosies, threesies, foursies" in a precise, well-modulated voice, not so loud as to
that two can derive
me
soft as to allow
be annoying, not so
to forget.
more enjoyment from playing
I
point out to Shotwell
jacks than one, but
he
have asked repeatedly to be allowed to play by myself, but he simply shakes his head. "Why?" I ask. "They're mine," he says. And when he has finished, when he has sated himself, back they go into IS
not interested.
I
the attache case. It is
my
unfair but there
is
nothing
I
can do about
it.
I
am
aching to get
hands on them. Shotwell and
I
watch the console. Shotwell and
I
live
under the
ground and watch the console. If certain events take place upon the console, we are to insert our keys in the appropriate locks and turn our keys. Shotwell has a key and I have a key. If we turn our keys simultaneously the bird flies, certain switches are activated and the bird flies. But the bird never
flies.
In one hundred thirty-three days the bird has
watch each other. We each wear a .45 and if Shotwell behaves strangely I am supposed to shoot him. If I behave strangely Shotwell is supposed to shoot me. We watch the connot flown. Meanwhile Shotwell and
I
and think about shooting each other and think about the bird. Shotwell's behavior with the jacks is strange. Is it strange? I do not know.
sole
Perhaps he
is
merely a
selfish bastard,
do not know. and each of us is supposed
perhaps his childhood was twisted.
Each of us wears
a .45
perhaps his character
is
flawed,
I
to shoot the other
Donald Barthelme if
the other
is
behaving strangely.
know. In addition to the about concealed
in
my
How
351
strangely
is
strangely?
I
do not
have a .38 which Shotwell does not know attache case, and Shotwell has a .25 caliber
.45
I
do not know about strapped to his right calf. Sometimes instead of watching the console I pointedly watch Shotwell's .45, but this Beretta which
is
I
simply a ruse, simply a maneuver, in reality
when
it
dangles in the vicinity of his right
me
ing strangely he will shoot
resting idly atop
attache case,
my
hand.
In the beginning
Our behavior was
my
calf. If
am
watching
he decides
I
his
am
hand
behav-
not with the .45 but with the Beretta.
Similarly Shotwell pretends to watch
hand
I
my
.45
but he
is
really
watching
my hand resting idly atop My hand resting idly atop my attache case.
I
attache case,
my my
took care to behave normally. So did Shotwell.
painfully normal.
Norms
of politeness, consideration,
speech, and personal habits were scrupulously observed. But then
it
became apparent that an error had been made, that our relief was not going to arrive. Owing to an oversight. Owing to an oversight we have been here for one hundred thirty-three days. When it became clear that an error had been made, that we were not to be relieved, the norms were relaxed. Definitions of normality
uary
1,
called by us,
were redrawn
agreement of JanThe Agreement. Uniform regulations were relaxed, in the
and mealtimes are no longer rigorously scheduled. We eat when we are hungry and sleep when we are tired. Considerations of rank and precedence were temporarily put aside, a handsome concession on the part of Shotwell,
who
is
a captain, whereas
us watches the console at
console at
all
watches the console the other and
we
Our system
am
only a
first
One
lieutenant.
of
times rather than two of us watching the
all
times, except
I
when we
at all times
and
if
are both
the bird
on our flies
feet.
One
of us
then that one wakes
turn our keys in the locks simultaneously and the bird
do not care because I am not well, and Shotwell does not care because he is not himself. After the agreement was signed Shotwell produced the jacks and the rubber ball from his attache case, and I began to write a series of descriptions of forms occurring in nature, such as a shell, a leaf, a stone, an animal. On the walls. flies.
involves a delay of perhaps twelve seconds but
Shotwell plays jacks and
I
I
write descriptions of natural forms
on the
walls.
Shotwell
is
enrolled in a
USAFI
course which leads to a master's
degree in business administration from the University of Wisconsin
(al-
though we are not in Wisconsin, we are in Utah, Montana or Idaho). When we went down it was in either Utah, Montana or Idaho, I don't remember. We have been here for one hundred thirty-three days owing
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
352
an oversight. The pale green reinforced concrete walls sweat and the air conditioning zips on and off erratically and Shotwell reads Introduc-
to
and Munk, making notes with a blue ballpoint pen. Shotwell is not himself, but I do not know it, he presents a calm aspect and reads Introduction to Marketing and makes his exemplary notes with a blue ballpoint pen, meanwhile controlling the .38 in tion to Marketing by Lassiter
my
attache case with one-third of his attention.
We
I
am
not well.
have been here one hundred thirty-three days owing to an
Although now we are not sure what
what is plan. Perhaps the plan is for us to stay here permanently, or if not permanently at least for a year, for three hundred sixty-five days. Or if not for a year for some number of days known to them and not known to us, such as two hundred days. Or perhaps they are observing our behavior in some oversight.
is
oversight,
wav, sensors of some kind, perhaps our behavior determines the of days.
It
may be
that they are pleased with us, with our behavior, not
in every detail but in
sum. Perhaps the whole thing
perhaps the whole thing successful.
I
number
is
is
very successful,
an experiment and the experiment
do not know. But
very
way they can
suspect that the only
I
is
persuade sun-loving creatures into their pale green sweating reinforced concrete rooms under the ground
to say that the system
is
is
twelve hours
And then lock us below for some number of days known to them and not known to us. We eat well although the frozen enchiladas are damp when defrosted and the frozen devil's food cake is on, twelve hours
off.
sour and untasty.
We
shouting in his sleep,
and acrimoniously. I hear Shotwell objecting, denouncing, cursing sometimes, weepsleep uneasily
ing sometimes, in his sleep.
on
Nor has Shotwell been
attache case so as to get at the
shiny surface. air
Shotwell sleeps
his attache case, so as to get at the jacks.
unsuccessful.
my
When
I
I
try to pick
Thus
far
I
the lock
have been
on
successful in picking the locks
.38.
I
have seen the marks on the
laughed, in the latrine, pale green walls sweating and the
conditioning whispering, in the latrine.
on the walls, scratching them on the tile surface with a diamond. The diamond is a two and one-half carat solitaire I had in my attache case when we went down. It was for I
Lucy.
write descriptions of natural forms
The south
covered. I
am
I
wall of the
have described a
room containing
shell, a leaf, a stone,
aware that the baseball bat
"The meter
baseball bat,"
is
made
is
already
animals, a baseball bat.
not a natural form. Yet
said, "is typically
I
the console
of wood.
It is
I
described typically
it:
one
one end, tapering to afford a the other. The end with the handhold typically offers
in length or a
comfortable grip
at
a slight rim, or
lip,
little
at the
longer, fat at
nether extremity, to prevent slippage."
My
Donald Barthelme
353
description of the baseball bat ran to 4500 words,
diamond on the south
wall.
all
Does Shotwell read what
scratched with a I
have written?
I
am
aware that Shotwell regards my writing-behavior as a little strange. Yet it is no stranger than his jacks-behavior, or the day he appeared in black bathing trunks with the .25 caliber Beretta strapped to
do not know.
I
and stood over the console, trying to span with his two arms outstretched the distance between the locks. He could not do it, I had his right calf
already tried, standing over the console with
was moved
my
two arms outstretched,
comment but did not comment, comment would have provoked countercomment, comment would have led God knows where. They had in their infinite patience, in their infinite the distance
too great.
is
I
foresight, in their infinite
to
wisdom already imagined
man
a
standing over
the console with his two arms outstretched, trying to span with his two
arms outstretched the distance between the
locks.
Shotwell
is
not himself.
He has made certain overtures. The burden
of his message
is
not clear.
has something to do with the keys, with the
locks. Shotwell
situation than sole,
is I.
It
a strange person.
He
He
appears to be
goes about his business
less affected
stolidly,
by our
watching the con-
studying Introduction to Marketing, bouncing his rubber ball on
He appears to He says nothing.
the floor in a steady, rhythmical, conscientious manner.
be
less affected
by our situation than
I
am.
He
is
stolid.
But he has made certain overtures, certain overtures have been made. I am not sure that I understand them. They have something to do with the keys, with the locks. Shotwell has something in mind. Stolidly he shucks the shiny silver paper from the frozen enchiladas, stolidly he
them into the electric oven. But he has something must be a quid pro quo. I insist on a quid pro quo.
stuffs
there
in I
mind. But
have some-
thing in mind. I
which not
my
am
not well.
city the bird
I
is
responsibility.
do not know our target. They do not tell us for targeted. I do not know. That is planning. That is My responsibility is to watch the console and when
upon the console, turn my key in the lock. Shotwell bounces the rubber ball on the floor in a steady, stolid, rhythmical manner. I am aching to get my hands on the ball, on the jacks. We have been here one hundred thirty-three days owing to an oversight. I write on the walls. Shotwell chants "onesies, twosies, threesies, fourcertain events take place
sies" in a precise,
well-modulated voice.
rubber
hands and
ball in his
rattles
them
Now
he cups the
suggestively.
I
jacks
and the
do not know
which city the bird is targeted. Shotwell is not himself. Sometimes I cannot sleep. Sometimes Shotwell cannot Sometimes when Shotwell cradles me in his arms and rocks me to
for
sleep.
sleep,
354
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
"Guten abend, gute Nacht," or I cradle Shotwell in my arms and rock him to sleep, singing, I understand what it is Shotwell wishes me to do. At such moments we are very close. But only if he will give me the jacks. That is fair. There is something he wants me to do with my key, while he does something with his key. But only if he will give me my turn. That is fair. I am not well. singing Brahms'
V.
S.
Naipaul
THE MECHANICAL GENIUS
My
Uncle Bhakcu was very nearly a mechanical genius. I cannot remember a time when he was not the owner of a motor-vehicle of some sort. I don't think he always approved of the manufacturer's designs, however, for he was always pulling engines to bits. Titus Hoyt said that this was also a habit of the Eskimos. It was something he had got out of a geography book. If
I
try to
Bhakcu I never see his face. I can see only the he worms his way under a car. I was worried when
think of
soles of his feet as
Bhakcu was under a car because the jack and fall on him.
it
looked so easy for the car to
slip off
One day it did. He gave a faint groan that reached the ears of only his wife. She bawled, "Oh God!" and burst into tears right away. "I know something wrong. Something happen to he.'' Mrs. Bhakcu always used this pronoun when she spoke of her husband.
She hurried to the side of the yard and heard Bhakcu groaning. "Man," she whispered, "you all right?" He groaned a little more loudly. He said, "How the hell I all right? You mean you so blind you ain't see the whole motor-car break up my arse?" Mrs. Bhakcu, dutiful wife, began to cry afresh. She beat on the galvanized-iron fence. "Hat," Mrs. Bhakcu called, "Hat, come quick. A whole motor-car fall on he." Hat was cleaning out the cow-pen. When he heard Mrs. Bhakcu he laughed. "You know what I always does say," Hat said. "When you
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
356
play the ass you
bound
to catch hell.
The
blasted car brand-new.
What
the hell he was tinkering with so?"
"He say the crank-shaft wasn't working nice." "And is there he looking for the crank-shaft?" "Hat," Bhakcu shouted from under the car, "the moment you get this car from off me, I going to break up your tail." "Man," Mrs. Bhakcu said to her husband, "how you so advantageous? The man come round with his good good mind to help you and now you want to beat him up?" Hat began to look hurt and misunderstood. Hat said, "It ain't nothing new. Is just what I expect. Is just what I does always get for interfering in other people business. You know I mad to leave you and your husband here and go back to the cow-pen. "No, Hat. You mustn't mind he. Think what you would say if a whole big new motor-car fall on you." Hat said, "All right, all right. I have to go and get some of the boys." We heard Hat shouting in the street. "Boyee and Errol!" "
No
answer.
"Bo-yee and Ehhroll!"
"Co-ming, Hat."
"Where the
you boys been, eh? You think you is man now and your hands in your pocket and walk out like man?
hell
you could just stick You was smoking, eh?" "Smoking, Hat?" "But what happen now? You turn deaf all of a sudden?" "Was Boyee was smoking, Hat." "Is a lie. Hat. Was Errol really. I just stand up watching him." "Somebody make you policeman now, eh? Is cut-arse for both of you. Errol, go cut a whip for Boyee. Boyee, go cut a whip for Errol."
We heard
the boys whimpering.
From under the car Bhakcu called, boys alone? You go bless them bad one then they go lose you in big
jail.
Why
"Hat,
why you
don't leave the
of these days, you know, and
you don't leave the boys alone? They
now."
Hat shouted back, "You mind your own business, you hear. Otherwise I leave you under that car until you rotten, you hear." Mrs. Bhakcu said to her husband, "Take it easy, man." But it was nothing serious after all. The jack had slipped but the axle rested on a pile of wooden blocks, pinning Bhakcu to ground without injuring him.
When Bhakcu came
out he looked
at his clothes.
These were
a pair
V. S. Naipaul
357
of khaki trousers and a sleeveless vest, both black and
stiff
with engine
grease.
Bhakcu said to his wife, 'They really dirty now, eh?" She regarded her husband with pride. "Yes, man," she
said.
"They
really dirty."
Bhakcu smiled. Hat said, "Look, I just sick of lifting up motor-car from off you, you hear. If you want my advice, you better send for a proper mechanic." Bhakcu wasn't listening. He said to his wife, "The crank-shaft was all right. Is something else."
Mrs. Bhakcu
you must eat first." Hat and said, "He don't eat when he working on the
said, "Well,
She looked at car unless I remind he." Hat said, "What you want me do with that? Write it down with a pencil on a piece of paper and send it to the papers? I wanted to watch Bhakcu working on the car that evening, so I said to him, "Uncle Bhakcu, your clothes looking really dirty and greasy. I wonder how you could bear to wear them. He turned and smiled at me. "What you expect, boy?" he said. "Mechanic people like me ain't have time for clean clothes." "What happen to the car, Uncle Bhakcu?" I asked. '
He
didn't reply.
"The tappet knocking?" I suggested. One thing Bhakcu had taught me about cars was that tappets were always knocking. Give Bhakcu any car in the world, and the first thing he would tell you about it was, "The tappet knocking, you know. Hear. Hear it?" "The tappet knocking?" I asked. He came right up to me and asked eagerly, "What, you hear it knocking?"
And
before
I
had time
Bhakcu pulled him away,
to say, "Well,
saying,
something did knocking," Mrs.
"Come and
eat
now, man. God, you
get your clothes really dirty today." •
The
car that
fell
•
•
on Bhakcu wasn't
really a
new
car,
Bhakcu boasted that it very nearly was. "It only do two hundred miles," he used to say. Hat said, "Well, I know Trinidad small, but I didn't know
although
it
was so
small." I
remember the day
it
was bought.
It
was a Saturday. And that
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
358
morning Mrs. Bhakcu came to my mother and they talked about the cost of rice and flour and the black market. As she was leaving, Mrs. Bhakcu said, "He gone to town today. He say he got to buy a new car." So we waited for the new car. Midday came, but Bhakcu didn't. Hat
"Two
said,
to one, that
man
taking
down
the engine right this
minute."
About four o'clock we heard
down Miguel
banging and a
a
Street towards Docksite
Chevrolet, one of the 1939 models.
It
we saw
and looking
clattering,
the car.
was a blue
It
looked rich and new.
We began to
wave and cheer, and I saw Bhakcu waving his left hand. We danced into the road in front of Bhakcu's house, waving and cheering.
The
car
came nearer and Hat
said,
"Jump, boys!
Run
for
your
life.
Like he get mad." It
was a near thing. The car
just
raced past the house and
we
stopped cheering.
"The car out of control. It go have thing don't happen quick." Mrs. Bhakcu laughed. "What you think it is at Hat
said,
a accident,
all?"
she
But we raced after the car, crying after Bhakcu. He wasn't waving with his left hand. He was trying
to
if
some-
said.
warn people
off.
By a miracle, Bhakcu said, Street,
stopped
it
"I
just
before Ariapita Avenue.
did mashing
but the brakes
ain't
down
working.
Is
the brakes since a funny thing.
I
I
turn Miguel
overhaul the
brakes just this morning."
Hat
said, "It
have two things
for
you
to do.
Overhaul your head or
haul your arse away before you get people in trouble."
Bhakcu back home."
said,
"You boys go have
to give
me
a
hand
to
push the car
As we were pushing it past the house of Morgan, the pyrotechnicist, Mrs. Morgan shouted, "Ah, Mrs. Bhakcu, I see you buy a new car today,
man." Mrs. Bhakcu didn't reply. Mrs. give
me
Morgan
a ride in his
Mrs. Bhakcu
must
give
me
Bhakcu up?
said,
new
"Ah, Mrs. Bhakcu, you think your husband go car?"
said, "Yes,
a ride
first
you husband
when he buy it." Mrs. Bhakcu, "Why you don't shut your mouth
on
said to
he go give you a ride, but
his donkey-cart
V.
is
my
husband, and
Bhakcu
I
Naipaul
359
how you want me
Mrs. Bhakcu said, "But
You
S.
have to stand up
said very sternly,
my mouth
to shut
up?
for you."
"You only stand up
for
me when
I
tell
you, you hear."
We
left
the car in front of Bhakcu's house, and
Mrs. Bhakcu to their quarrel.
we
left
Mr. and
wasn't a very interesting one. Mrs.
It
Bhakcu kept on claiming her right to stand up for her husband, and Mr. Bhakcu kept on rejecting the claim. In the end Bhakcu had to beat his wife.
This wasn't as easy as
it
sounds.
If
you want
to get a proper picture
of Mrs. Bhakcu you must consider a pear as a scale-model. Mrs. Bhakcu
had so much they looked
And
flesh, in fact, that
like
when she
marks of parenthesis.
as for her quarrelling voice
Hat used
held her arms at her sides,
to say, "It
sound
as
.
.
.
though
it
coming from
a
gramophone
record turning fast fast backwards."
For a long time I think Bhakcu experimented with rods for beating his wife, and I wouldn't swear that it wasn't Hat who suggested a cricket bat. But whoever suggested it, a second-hand cricket bat was bought
from one of the groundsmen used on Mrs. Bhakcu.
Hat
The
said, "Is the
at the
Queen's Park Oval, and
only thing she really could
feel,
strangest thing about this was that Mrs.
the bat clean and well-oiled. Boyee tried
but Mrs. Bhakcu never lent
many
I
oiled,
and
think."
Bhakcu
herself kept
times to borrow the bat,
it.
So on the evening of the day when the car fell on Bhakcu I went see him at work. "What you did saying about the tappet knocking?" he said. "I didn't say
nothing,"
I
said. "I
to
was asking you."
"Oh."
Bhakcu worked late into the night, taking down the engine. He worked all the next day, Sunday, and all Sunday night. On Monday morning the mechanic came. Mrs. Bhakcu told my mother, "The company send the mechanic man. The trouble with these Trinidad mechanics is that they is just pissin-tail little boys who don't know the first thing about cars and things." I went round to Bhakcu's house and saw the mechanic with his head inside the bonnet. Bhakcu was sitting on the running-board, rubbing grease over everything the mechanic handed him. He looked so
BESTOFMODERN HUMOR
THE
36c
happy dipping his fingers grease. Uncle Bhakcu."
"Go away,
boy.
You
in the grease that
I
asked, "Let
me
rub some
too small."
and watched him. He said, "The tappet was knocking, but I fix it." I said, "Good." The mechanic was cursing. I asked Bhakcu, "How the points?" He said, "I have to check them up. I got up and walked around the car and sat on the running-board next to Bhakcu. I looked at him and I said, "You know something?" "What?" "When I did hear the engine on Saturday, I didn't think it was sat
I
beating nice."
Bhakcu
said,
"You
getting to be a real smart
man, you know. You
learning fast." I
said, "Is
It
what you teach me."
was, as a matter of fact, pretty nearly the limit of
The knocking
tappet, the points, the beat of the engine
my
and
knowledge.
—
yes,
I
had
one thing. "You know. Uncle Bhakcu," I said. "What, boy?" "Uncle Bhakcu, I think is the carburettor." "You really think so, boy?" "I sure. Uncle Bhakcu."
forgotten
"Well,
I
go
tell
you, boy.
Is
the
first
thing
I
ask the mechanic.
He
don't think so."
The mechanic lifted a dirty and angry face from the engine and said, "When you have all sort of ignorant people messing about with a engine the white people build with their own hands, what the hell else you expect?"
Bhakcu winked
He
said, "/
at
think
me.
is
the carburettor." •
Of
•
•
Sometimes Bhakcu raced the engine while I put my palm over the curburettor and off again. Bhakcu never told me why we did this and I never asked. Sometimes we had to siphon petrol from the tank, and I would pour this petrol into the carburettor while Bhakcu raced the engine. I often asked him to let me race the engine, but he wouldn't agree. all
the
drills,
I
liked the carburettor drill the best.
V. S. Naipaul
One fire
didn't
day the engine caught
fire,
361
but
I
jumped away
in time.
The
last.
Bhakcu came out of the car and looked at the engine in a puzzled way. I thought he was annoyed with it, and I was prepared to see him dismantle it there and then. That was the last time we did that drill with the carburettor. •
At
last
•
•
the mechanic tested the engine and the brakes, and said,
"Look, the car good good now, you hear.
It
cost
me more work
than
if
I
Leave the damn thing alone." After the mechanic left, Bhakcu and I walked very thoughtfully two or three times around the car. Bhakcu was stroking his chin, not talking to me. Suddenly he jumped into the driver's seat, and pressed the hornwas to build over a new
car.
button a few times.
He
said,
said,
I
He
"What you think about the horn, boy?"
"Blow
damn
keept the
though
We
it
He
me
hear."
his
head through
car quiet, you hear,
a
window and shouted, "Bhakcu,
man. You making the place sound
have a wedding going on."
ignored Hat.
said,
I
again, let
pressed the button again.
Hat pushed as
it
"Uncle Bhakcu,
said,
"You
I
don't think the horn blowing nice."
really don't think so?"
made a face and spat. So we began to work on the horn. When we were finished there was I
a bit of flex
wound round
the
steering-column.
Bhakcu looked at me and said, "You see, you could just take this wire now and touch it on any part of the metalwork, and the horn blow." looked unlikely, but
It I
said,
He
it
did work.
"Uncle Bhak, how you know about
said,
"You
just
keep on learning •
The men
all
all
these things?"
the time."
•
•
Bhakcu because they considered him a nuisance. But I liked him for the same reason that I liked Popo, the carpenter. For, thinking about it now, Bhakcu was also an artist. He interfered with motor-cars for the joy of the thing, and he never seemed worried about money. But
in the street didn't like
his wife
was worried. She,
like
my
mother, thought that she
was born to be a clever handler of money, born to make money sprout from nothing at all.
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
362
She
talked over the matter with
my mother one
day.
My
mother said, "Taxi making a lot of money these days, taking Americans and their girl friends all over the place." So Mrs. Bhakcu made her husband buy a lorry. This lorry was really the pride of Miguel Street. It was a big new Bedford and we all turned out to welcome it when Bhakcu brought it
home
for the
time.
first
Even Hat was impressed. build,"
he
said, "is a lorry.
"If
This
one thing the English people could not like your Ford and your Dodge,
is
is
you know." Bhakcu began working on it that ver>' afternoon, and Mrs. Bhakcu went around telling people, "Why not come and see how he working on the Bedford?"
From time and polish
Bhakcu would crawl out from under the lorry the wings and the bonnet. Then he would crawl under the to time
But he didn't look happy. The next day the people who had lent the money to buy the Bedford formed a deputation and came to Bhakcu's house, begging him to
lorry again.
desist.
Bhakcu remained under the
The money-lenders grew began to cry. Even that
lorry
angry, and failed to
all
the time, refusing to reply.
some of the women among them
move Bhakcu, and
in the
end the
deputation just had to go away.
When
Bhakcu began to take it out of his wife. He beat her and he said, "Is you who want me to buy lorry. Is you. Is you. All you thinking about is money, money. Just like your mother." the deputation
But the
real
left,
reason for his temper was that he couldn't put back the
engine as he had found
Two
it.
or three pieces remained outside and
they puzzled him.
The
He
agents sent a mechanic.
looked
at
the lorry and asked Bhakcu, very calmly,
"Why you
buy a Bedford? Bhakcu said, "I like the Bedford." The mechanic shouted, "Why the arse you didn't buy a RollsRoyce? They does sell those with the engine sealed down." Then he went to work, saying sadly, "Is enough to make you want to cry.
A
The
nice,
new new
starter
lorry like this."
never worked again.
And Bhakcu
always had to use the
crank.
Hat
said, "Is a blasted
everything this
man
still
shining,
cranking
it
up
all
like
shame. Lorry looking new, smelling new, sort of chalk-mark still on the chassis, and
some
old Ford pram."
V. S. Naipaul
363
But Mrs. Bhakcu boasted, "Fust crank, the engine does start." One morning it was a Saturday, market day Mrs. Bhakcu came
—
crying to
my
—
mother. She said "Ht? in hospital."
My
mother said, "Accident?" Mrs. Bhakcu said, "He was cranking up the lorry just outside the Market. Fust cunk, the engine start. But it was in gear and it roll he up against another lorry."
Bhakcu spent a week in hospital. All the time he had the lorry, he hated regularly with the cricket bat.
tongue, and It
I
and he beat her
his wife,
But she was beating him too, with her
think Bhakcu was really the loser in these quarrels.
was hard
to
back the lorry into the yard and
it
was Mrs. Bhakcu's
duty and joy to direct her husband.
One day
she said, "All right, man, back back, turn a
Oh
right, all right, all clear.
little
to the
God! No, no, no, man! Stop! You go knock
the fence down."
Bhakcu suddenly went mad. He reversed so fiercely he cracked the concrete fence. Then he shot forward again, ignoring Mrs. Bhakcu's screams, and reversed again, knocking down the fence altogether. He was in great temper, and while his wife remained outside crying he went to his little room, stripped to his pants, flung himself belly down on the bed, and began reading the Ramayana. The lorry wasn't making money. But to make any at all, Bhakcu had to have loaders. He got two of those big black Grenadian smallislanders who were just beginning to pour into Port of Spain. They called Bhakcu "Boss" and Mrs. Bhakcu "Madam," and this was nice. But when I
looked at these
men
sprawling happily in the back of the lorry in their
ragged dusty clothes and their squashed-up
much
whether they knew how their
own
felt hats,
used to wonder
I
worry they caused, and
how
uncertain
position was.
Mrs. Bhakcu's talk was
She would
tell
my
all
about these two men.
mother, mournfully, "Day after tomorrow we
have to pay the loaders."
come
now
Two
days later she would say, as though the
an end, "Today we pay the loaders. And in no time at all she would be coming around to my mother in distress again, saying, "Day after tomorrow we have to pay the loaders."
world had
to
"
—
months
seemed to hear about nothing else. The words were well known in the street, and became an idiom. Boyee would say to Errol on a Saturday, "Come, let we go to the one-thirty show at Roxy." And Errol would turn out his pockets and say, "I can't go, man. I Paying the loaders
pay the loaders."
for
I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
364
Hat
said, "It
look as though Bhakcu buy the lorry just to pay the
loaders."
The
lorry
went
in the end.
And
the loaders too.
I
don't
know what time when
happened to them. Mrs. Bhakcu had the lorry sold just at a lorries began making money. They bought a taxi. By now the competition was fierce and taxis were running eight miles for twelve cents, just enough to pay for oil and petrol. Mrs. Bhakcu told my mother, "The taxi ain't making money." So she bought another taxi, and hired a man to drive it. She said,
"Two
better than one."
Bhakcu was reading the Ramayana more and more. And even that began to annoy the people in the street. Hat said, "Hear the two of them now. She with that voice she and he singing that damn sing-song Hindu song."
got,
Picture then the following scene. Mrs. Bhakcu, very short, very
standing at the pipe in her yard, and shrilling at her husband.
He
fat,
is
in
on his belly, dolefully intoning the Ramayana. Suddenly he springs up and snatches the cricket bat in the corner of the room. He runs outside and begins to beat Mrs. Bhakcu with the bat. his pants, lying
The silence that follows lasts a few minutes. And then only Bhakcu's voice is heard, as he does
a solo from the
Ramayana. •
•
•
But don't think that Mrs. Bhakcu lost any pride in her husband. Whenever you listened to the rows between Mrs. Bhakcu and Mrs. Mor-
Bhakcu was still his wife's lord and master. Mrs. Morgan would say, "I hear your husband talking in his
gan, you realised that
last night,
sleep
loud loud."
"He wasn't
talking," Mrs.
"Singing? Hahahahaaah!
"What, Mrs. Morgan?" "If your husband sing
Bhakcu
said,
"he was singing."
You know something, Mrs. Bhakcu?"
for his supper,
both of
all
you
starve like
hell."
damn lot more than any of the ignorant man it have in you hear. He could read and write, you know. English and
"He know this street,
a
How
you so ignorant you don't know that the Ramayana is a holy book? If you coulda understand all the good thing he singing, you wouldn't be talking all this nonsense you talking now, you hear." "How your husband this morning, anyway? He fix any new cars Hindi.
lately?" "I
not going to dirty
my mouth
arguing with you here, you hear.
V.
He know how where he can
to
fix
fix all
S.
Naipaul
365
wonder nobody
his car. Is a
ain't tell
your husband
his so-call fireworks." •
•
•
Mrs. Bhakcu used to boast that Bhakcu read the Ramayana two or
some
three times a month. "It have
parts
he know by heart," she
said.
But that was little consolation, for money wasn't coming in. The man she had hired to drive the second taxi was playing the fool. She said, "He robbing me like hell. He say that the taxi making so little money I owe him now." She sacked the driver and sold the car.
She used because a
lot
her financial
all
She began rearing hens. That
flair.
failed
of the hens were stolen, the rest attacked by streel dogs,
and Bhakcu hated the smell anyway. She began selling bananas and oranges, but she did that more for her own enjoyment than for the little money it brought in. My mother said, "Why Bhakcu don't go out and get a work?" Mrs. Bhakcu
said,
My mother said,
"But
how you want want
that?"
was thinking about you." Mrs. Bhakcu said, "You could see he working with all the rude and crude people it have here in Port of Spain?"
My
mother
man
to see a
"I don't
said, "Well,
do something. People don't pay motor-car or singing Ramayana."
he have
crawling under a
I
it.
to
Mrs. Bhakcu nodded and looked sad.
My
mother the Ramayana?" 1
said,
"But what
I
saying at
all?
You
sure
Bhakcu know
sure sure.
My mother
said, "Well,
Ramayana, and he have
it
a car.
easy easy.
He
easy for
him
Is
is
to
a
Brahmin, he know the
become
a pundit, a real
proper pundit."
Mrs. Bhakcu clapped her hands.
"Is a first-class idea.
Hindu pundits
making a lot of money these days." So Bhakcu became a pundit. •
He
still
tinkered with his car.
•
•
He had
to stop beating Mrs.
Bhakcu
with the cricket bat, but he was happy.
was haunted by thoughts of the dhoti-c\ad Pundit Bhakcu, crawling under a car, attending to a crank-shaft, while poor Hindus waited for I
him
to attend to their souls.
Tom Wolfe THE MID-ATLANTIC MAN
Roger! Have you met George? Cyril! Have you met George? Keith! Have
you met George? Brian! Have you met George? Tony! Have you met George! Nigel! Have you
— oh god, their
first
them
to
he's
doing a
hell of a job of
names, first-naming the
George,
who
hell
it,
introducing everybody by
out of everybody, introducing
New York: George is an American account. A hell of a job of introductions
just arrived
from
and the key man in the Fabrilex he is doing. He has everybody from the firm, plus a lot of other people, English and American, all calculated to impress and flatter American George,
all
piled into this sort of library-reception
Club amid the
room
upstairs at the
lyre-splat chairs, bullion-fringe curtains, old blacky
Raeburn-style portraits, fabulously junky glass-and-ormolu chandeliers,
paw-foot chiffoniers, teapoys, ingenious library steps leading resolutely
up
into thin
air,
a wonderful dark world of dark
box covings, moldings, boots,
made
to look like
wood, dark
rugs, candy-
flutings, pilasters, all red as table wine, it
brown
as
has been steeped a hundred years in expensive
tobacco, roast beef, horseradish sauce and dim puddings.
The Americans point, the point
is
Club stuff up, but that is not the Americans are childish in many ways
really lap this
that
—
Christ,
and about as subtle as a Wimpy bender: but in the long run it doesn't make any difference. They just turn on the power. They have the power, they just move in and take it, introducing people by their first names as they go, people they've never laid eyes on, pals, and who gives a damn. They didn't go to Cambridge and learn to envy people who belonged to the Pitt Club and commit the incredible gaffe of walking into the Pitt Club with a Cambridge scarf on. They just turn on the money or what-
Tom
Wolfe
367
and the grinning first names shall inherit the earth, their lie-down crewcuts as firm and pure as Fabrilex and he has had a couple of highballs. Highballs! That is what they call whisky-and-sodas. And now he is exhilarated with the absolute baldness of putting on his glistening ceramic grin and introducing all of these faces to George by their first names, good old George, cleaned-and pressed old George, big-blucher-shoed old George, popped-out-of-theFabrilex-mold old George the delicious baldness of it! Karl! Have you met George? Alec! Have you met George? John! Have you met George? George, predictably, has a super-ingratiating and deferential grin on his face, shaking hands, pumping away, even with people who don't put their hands out at first Mark! shake hands with George, he wants to say and as George shakes hands he always lowers his head slightly and grins in panic and looks up from under his eyebrows, deferentially, this kind of unconscious deference because he is meeting Englishmen Still! Why should George give a damn? He can throw away points like this right and left. That's the way Americans are. They can make the ever
and they take
takes,
it
it,
—
—
—
—
—
.
.
wrong wrong
gesture, forks
it
make
.
the most horrible malapropisms, use so
drives the waiter
up the
wall;
many
demonstrate themselves to
— and yet afterwards they don't give
back the next morning
as
.
.
be, palpably, social hydrocephalics, total casualties of gaucherie
humiliation
.
if
a
damn. They are
and right
nothing had happened, smashing on, good-
humored, hard-grabbing, winning, taking, clutching. George can scrape and bobble his eyeballs under his eyebrows all day and he will still make his £20,000 a year and buy and sell every bastard in this room Nicholas! Have you met George? Harold! Have you met George? Freddie! Have you met George? "Pe-t-e-r .
.
.
Oh
..."
Christ
.
.
the second syllable of the
.
name
just dribbles off
his lips.
go through with He do the — suddenly he name thing with he him over and introduce him American — — George! — of course Peter? A Peter on the hierarchy of the the same another hierarchy — by yet ...
With Peter
can't
Peter!
this
pal?
is
age, 33,
right
as
to
they're pals,
if
precisely his level in
class, to call
in
pals.
firm,
it
its
name Peter's fine yet languid face, his casual yet inviolate
hair
can't
can't hail
Peter,
first
it.
— that
old, ancient thing, class,
Peter by his
first
name.
It is
as
if
now
into the
wavy thatchy
has him and he can't introduce
room has
burst the policeman,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
368
the arresting officer, from
.
.
.
that world, the entire world of nannies,
cottages ornees in Devonshire, honeysuckle iron balustrades, sailor suits,
hoops and
men,
sticks, lolly
Eton
collars,
deb
parties, introductions to rich old
clubs, cliques, horn-handled cigar cutters
ineradicable anxiety of class in England
—
in short, the ancient,
— and he knows already the look
of patient, tolerant disgust that will begin to slide over Peter's face within
him and
the next half second as he looks at
ceramic grin and
his
his
American
and
friends
his
euphoria and his highballs. In that instant, con-
—
on the one hand George's eyeballs and the power of the past on the begin to bobble under the eyebrows he realizes what has happened to Peter's lips begin to curdle other himself. He has become a Mid-Atlantic Man. He meets them all the time in London now. They are Englishmen gone American. The usual who have reversed the usual process and gone process has been that Americans have gone to England and fronted by the power of the future
— —
—
.
.
.
.
English.
Woodrow Wilson
the Court of
.
appoints Walter Hines Page ambassador to
James's and
St.
.
tells
him: "Just one word of advice, don't
become an Englishman." Page says, "Sure, O.K.," but, of course, he does, he becomes so much an Englishman he can't see straight. The usual pattern
he begins using
is,
holding the fork in the
left
hand.
his knife
He
and fork Continental
goes to a tailor
who
style,
puts that nice
English belly into the lapels of his coat and builds up suits
marvelous and arcane layers and layers of worsted, welts,
made
of
darts, pleats,
numbers of pockets, and so many buttons to button and unbutton, and he combs his hair into wings over the ears, and he puts a certain nice drag in his voice and learns to walk like he is recovering from a broken back. But one knows about all that. The American has always gone English in order to endow himself with the mystique of the English upper classes. The Englishman today goes American, becomes a Mid-Atlantic Man, to achieve the op-
double-stitches, linings, buttons, pockets, incredible
He wants
from under the domination of the English going classless. And he goes classless by taking on upper classes by the style of life, or part of the style of life, of a foreigner who cannot be fitted into the English class system, the modern, successful, powerful
posite.
to get out
.
.
.
American.
The most obvious example
of the Mid-Atlantic
Man
is
the young
English show-business figure, a singer, musician, manager, producer, impresario,
who
goes American in a big way.
A singer,
for example, sings
American rhythm and blues songs, in an American accent, becomes a pal of American entertainers, studs his conversation with American slang, like, I mean you know, man, that's where it's at, baby, and, finally, begins to talk with an American accent in an attempt to remove the .
.
.
Tom
Wolfe
^69
curse of a working-class accent. But the typical Mid-Atlantic
middle
class
relations,
and works
in
one of the newer
is
industries, advertising, public
chemical engineering, consulting for
credit cards, agentry, industrial design,
Man
this
commercial
and art,
that, television,
motion pictures,
the whole world of brokerage, persuasion, savantry and shows that has
grown up beyond the ancient divisions of landowning, moneylending and the production of dry goods. He is vaguely aware he may try to keep it out of his mind that his background is irrevocably middle class and that everybody in England is immediately aware of it and that this has held him back. This may even be why he has gravitated into one of the newer fields, but still the ancient drag of class in England drags him, drags him, drags him. They happen to be watching television one night and some perfectly urbane and polished person like Kenneth Allsop comes on the screen and after three or four sentences somebody has to observe, poor Kenneth Allsop, listen to the way he says practically, he will never get the Midlands out of his voice, he breaks it all up, into practi-cally and he laughs, but grimly, because he knows there must be at least fifty things like that to mark him as hopelessly middle class and he has none of Allsop's fame to take the curse off. He first began to understand all this as far back as his first month at Cambridge. Cambridge! which was supposed to turn him into one of those inviolate, superior persons who rule England and destiny. Cambridge was going to be a kind of finishing school. His parents had a very definite idea of it that way, a picture of him serving sherry to some smart friends in his chambers, wearing a jacket that seems to have worn and mellowed like a 90-year-old Persian rug. Even he himself had a vague notion of how Cambridge was going to transform him from a bright and mousy comprehensive schoolboy into one of those young men with assumes he is in control, at spread collars and pale silk ties who just restaurants, in clubs, at parties, with women, in careers, in life, on rural weekends, and thereby is. And then the very first month this thing happened with the Pitt Club and the Cambridge scarf. His first move on the road to having smart people over to his chambers for sherry, and Cuban tobacco Cuban tobacco was also included in this vision was to buy a Cambridge scarf, a nice long thing with confident colors that would wrap around the neck and the lower tip of his chin and flow in the wind. So he would put on his scarf and amble around the streets, by the colleges, peeking in at the Indian restaurants, which always seemed to be closed, and thinking. Well, here I am, a Cambridge man.
—
—
.
.
.
.
—
.
.
.
—
.
.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
370
day he came upon this place and a glow came from inside, red as wine, brown as boots, smart people, sherry-sherry, and so he stepped inside and suddenly a lot of white faces turned his way, like a universe
One
—
erupting with eggs Benedict, faces in the foyer, faces from the dining tables farther in.
A porter with
chipped-beef jowls stepped up and looked
him up and down once, dubious as hell, and said: "Are you a member, sir?" Such a voice! It was obvious that he knew immediately
he was not a member and the question was merely, witheringly, rhetorical and really said, Why does a hopeless little nit like you insist on wandering in where you don't belong, and all the eggs Benedict faces turned toward that
knew immediately! And it was as if their eyes had fastened immediately upon his jugular vein no! upon the Cambridge scarf. there in the ancient woody He mumbled and turned his head brown of the place was a long coat rack, and hanging on it was every kind of undergraduate garment a right mind could think of, greatcoats, him were an echo of the same
thing.
They
all
—
—
.
.
.
riding macs, cloaks, capes, gowns, mantles, even ponchos, mufflers,
checked mufflers, Danish mufflers, camel-tan mufflers, ratty old aunteverything and anything in the whole woofy English knitty mufflers except for a goddamn universe of cotton, wool, rubber and leather
—
.
Cambridge
scarf.
This place turned out to be the
Pitt
.
.
Club, watering
Wearing a Cambridge scarf in here was far, far worse than having no insignia at all. In a complex Cambridge hierarchy of colleges and clubs if all one had was an insignia that said merely that one had been admitted to the university that was as much as saying, well, he's here and that's all one can say about him, other than that he is a hopeless fool. He did not throw the Cambridge scarf away, strangely enough. He folded it up into a square and tucked it way back in the bottom of his bottom drawer, along with the family Bible his grandfather had given him. From that day on he was possessed by the feeling that there were trough of the incomparables, the Cambridge
elite.
—
—
two worlds, the eggs Benedict faces and his, and never, in four years, did he invite a single smart person over for sherry. Or for Cuban tobacco.
He smoked
English cigarettes that stained his teeth.
no tremendous hopes for the one day! with advertising business until one day he was in New York all Mid-Atlantic Men it seems to start one day in New York. Practically always they have started flying to New York more and
Even
years later, in fact, he held
—
more on lex
business.
He
started flying over
was going to run a big campaign
in
—
on the Fabrilex account. FabriEngland. So he began flying to
Tom
New York and getting gradually turned out to be a strangely
come back
ulating aura of sheer
into the .
.
.
New
with that word for
money,
Wolfe
^71
New York advertising life,
stimulating
—
which
Mid-Atlantic
all
York, stimulating
.
.
.
Men
strangely stim-
drive, conniving, hard work, self-indul-
gence, glamour, childishness, cynicism. •
•
•
Beginning with the reception room of the
Agency.
It
was
decorated with the most incredible black leather sofas, quilted and stuffed to the gullet, with the leather gushing and heaving over the edge of the arms, the back and everywhere. There was wall-to-wall carpet, not
Wilton but so thick one could break one's ankle in it, and quite vermilion, to go with the vermilion walls and all sorts of inexplicable like a
polished brass objects set in niches, candelabra, busts, pastille-burners, vases, etc., lex
and
who seemed
a receptionist
topped with spun brass back-combed with exotic
at a delicate secretaire faced
to
be made of polished Fabri-
hair.
wood
She
didn't
sit at
a
desk but
veneers, tulipwood, satin-
wood, harewood. She also operated a switchboard, which was made to look, however, like the keyboard of a harpsichord. There was one large painting, apparently by the last painter in Elizabeth, New Jersey, to copy Franz Kline. Three different members of the firm, Americans, told him the reception room looked like "a San Francisco whorehouse." Three of
them used
that
said in derision,
of
San Francisco whorehouse. This was not however. They thought it was crazy but they were proud
same
New York! One of them
it.
simile, a
told
him the reception room looked
like a
San Fran-
whorehouse while having his shoes shined at his desk in his office. They were both sitting there talking, the usual, except that a Negro, about 50, was squatted down over a portable shoeshine stand shining the American's shoes. But he kept right on talking about the San Francisco whorehouse and Fabrilex as if all he had done was turn on an air-conditioner. He also had an "executive telephone." This was some sort of amplified microphone and speaker connected to the telephone, so that he didn't have to actually pick up a telephone, none of that smalltime stuff. All he had to do was talk in the general direction of the desk. But cisco
of course!
The
delicious
.
.
.
baldness of
subtlety? Just win, like, that's the
had £70 million if it
in
accounts
name
it!
Who
gives a
of the game, and the
damn about Agency
last year.
They always took him to lunch at places like the Four Seasons, and came to £16 for four people, for lunch, that was nothing. There are
expensive places where businessmen eat lunch in London, but they always have some kind of coy atmosphere, trattorias, chez this or that, or
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
372
old places with swiney, pebbly English surnames, Craw's, Grouse's,
But the Four Seasons! The place practically exudes an air-conditioned sweat of pure huge expensive-account money. Everybody sits there in this huge bald smooth-slab Mies-van-der-Rohestyle black-onyx executive suite atmosphere taking massive infusions of exotic American cocktails, Margaritas, Gibsons, Bloody Marys, Rob Roys, Screwdrivers, Pisco Sours, and French wines and French brandies, while the blood vessels dilate and the ego dilates and Leonard Lyons, the columnist, comes in to look around and see who is there, and everyone watches these ingenious copper-chain curtains rippling over the plate glass, rippling up, up, it is an optical illusion but it looks like they are rippling, rippling, rippling, rippling up this cliff of plate glass like a waterfall gone into reverse. And some guy at the table is letting everybody in on this deliciously child-cynical American secret, namely, that a lot of the cigarette advertising currently is based on motivational research into people's reactions to the cancer scare. For example, the ones that always show blue grass and blue streams and blond, blue-eyed young people with picnic baskets, and gallons of prime-of-life hormones gushing through their Diet-Rite loins, are actually aimed at hypochondriacs who need constant reassurScob's, Clot's.
On
ance that they aren't dying of cancer. say "I'd rather fight than switch" really give
up smoking"
One
the other hand, the ones that
mean
"I'd rather get
— New York! — the copper curtains •
•
.
.
.
cancer than
ripple up.
.
.
.
•
interesting, rather nice thing
he notices, however,
are tremendously anxious to please him.
They
by him, even though he comes there very
is
that they
are apparently impressed
much
They
as the beggar.
are
the parent firm. Whatever they say about the Fabrilex campaign in En-
gland goes, in the long run.
masochists
who
If
they want to aim
fear cancer of the skin, then that's
as a partner, no, as slightly superior.
English.
12-inch
it.
gets
it.
at
hypochondriac
Yet they It is
treat
him
because he
is
They keep staring at his suit, which is from Huntsman and has glorious! side vents. They watch his table manners and then
imitate him.
bring
Then he
it
.
Old George! He used
some water" or whatever
it
.
to say to waiters, ''Would
.
you please
was, whereas he always said, ''Could
—
you bring the cheese now, please?" or whatever it was the thing is, the Americans say would, which implies that the waiter is doing one a favor by granting this wish, whereas the Englishman class! says could, which assumes that since the waiter is a servant, he will if he can. And old George got that distinction right off! That's it with these Americans. They're incurable children, they're incurable nouveaux,
—
—
Tom
Wolfe
373
—
more tone but they sense the status distinctions. And so by the second time old George is saying "Could you bring me some water, do you think?" and running do-you-think together they spell finesse with a ph to give
it
into an upper-class blur over the top of his sopping glottis just real
.
.
.
like a
Englishman.
So
all
of a sudden he began to sense that he had
it
both ways.
He
had the American thing and the English thing. They emerge from the Four Seasons, out on to 52nd Street kheew! the sun blasts them in the eyes and there it is, wild, childish, bald, overpowering Park Avenue in the Fifties, huge cliffs of plate glass and steel frames, like a mountain of telephone booths. Hundreds of, jaysus, millions of dollars' worth of
—
—
shimmering junk, with so many sheets of plate glass the buildings all reflect each other in marine greens and blues, like a 25-cent postcard from Sarasota, Florida not a good building in the lot, but, jaysus, the we've-got-it money and power it represents. The sheer incredible yah! Rome of the twentieth century and because wealth and power are here, everything else follows, and it is useless for old England to continue to harp on form, because it is all based on the wealth and power England
— —
—
had 150 years ago. The platter of the world's goodie sweets tilts ... to New York, girls, for one thing, all these young lithe girls with flamingo legs come pouring into New York and come popping up out of the armpit-steaming sewer tunnels of the New York subways, out of those screeching sewers, dressed to the eyeballs, lathed, polished, linked, lac-
quered, coiffed with spun brass.
Ah, and they loved Englishmen, too. He found a brass-topped beauty and he will never forget following her up the stairs to her flat that first night. The front door was worn and rickety but heavy and had an
made
and lock immediately, automatically against those ravenous, adrenal New York animals out there; even New he York's criminals are more animal, basic savage, Roman, criminal never remembered a block of flats in London with an air hinge on the and he followed her up the stairs, a few steps behind her, front door air
hinge on
it
that
it
close
—
—
and watched the muscles in her calves contract and the hamstring ligaments spring out at the backs of her knees, oh young taut healthy New tender and brave. York girl flamingo legs, and it was all so Precisely! Her walk-up flat was so essentially dreary, way over in the East Eighties, an upper floor of somebody's old townhouse that had been .
cut up and jerry-built into
.
flats just slightly
.
better than a bed-sitter, with
good healthy wardrobe closet and a socalled Pullman kitchen in the living room, some fiercely, meanly efficient uni-unit, a little sink, refrigerator and stove all welded together behind
the
bedroom about the
size of a
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
374
bathroom with no window, just some sort of air duct in there with the slits grimed and hanging, booga, with some sort of gray compost of lint, sludge, carbon particles and noxious gases. shutters at
And
one end, and
a
the toilet barely worked, just a lazy spiral current of water
hole after one pulled tilted slightly,
but
down
that stubby
handle they have.
little
down the The floor
— brave and tender!
Somehow she had managed to make it globe lamps made of balsa strips and paper,
all
look beautiful, Japanese
greenery, great lush fronds
some kind of plant, several prints on the wall, one an insanely erotic water-color nude by Egon Schiele, various hangings, coverings, drapings of
of primitive
textiles,
monk's cloth, homespuns,
paper flowers, a bookcase, painted white,
full
a little vase full of violet
of heavyweight, or middle-
weight, paperback books. The Lonely Crowd, The Confessions of Felix Krull, African Genesis living in dreadful
— brave and tender! —
walk-up
flats,
cat feces in the Kitty Litter,
all
of these lithe young
girls
alone, with a cat, and the faint odor of
and an
oily
wooden
salad bowl
—
on the table, and yet there
and a cockroach silhouetted on the rim of the salad bowl was something touching about it, haunting, he wanted to say, the desperate fight to stay in New York amid the excitement of money and power, the Big Apple, and for days, if he is to be honest about it, he had the most inexplicably tender
down
memory
—
of
all right!
— the poor sad way
That poor, marvelous, erotic girl. At one point she had told him she had learned to put a diaphragm on in 15 seconds. She just said it, out of thin air. So bald. Early the next morning he took a cab back to his hotel to change for the day and the driver tried to project the thing in manic bursts through the rush-hour traffic, lurches of acceleration, sudden braking, skids, screeches, all the while shouting out the window, cursing and then demanding support from him "Dja see that! Guy got his head up his the water had lazed
in the toilet bowl.
—
Am
— and
he found himself having a thoroughly American reaction, actually answering these stupid questions because he wanted to be approved of by this poor bastard trying to hurtle through the money-and-power traffic, answering a cab driver who said, "Guy got because suddenly he found himself his head up his ass, am I right?" ass.
I
right?"
strangely,
—
—
he understood this thing the hell with scarves, Pitt Clubs and pale silk ties, and watch out England, you got your head up your ass, and here comes a Mid-Atlantic Man. close to the source,
•
•
•
London picked up brilliantly for Mid-Atlantic Man. His momentum was tremendous when he came back. London was a torpid little town on a river. He began to His career back with the
Agency
in
Tom Wolfe
375
American members of the firm. Certain things about the advertising business that he had never been able to stomach, really, but suddenly he began to realize that what nevertheless swallowed silently it was, these things were American, bald and cynical, only now he
cultivate the
—
.
.
.
understood. Yea-saying!
There was one American woman in the firm, and in the most unconcerned way she would talk about the opening of a big new American hotel that had gone up in London and how the invitation list was divided into (1) Celebrities, (2) VIPs, (3) CIPs and (4) just Guests. Things like now the beautiful part was that used to make his flesh crawl, but now the CIPs
— Commercially
—
—
Important People, people important to the
hotel for business reasons but
whose names meant nothing
in
terms of
publicity, however. Marvelous!
He
got to be a good friend of hers.
One day
they went out to lunch,
and there were a lot of people on the footpaths, and suddenly she spotted a woman about 20 feet away and said, "Look at her! The perfect C-i." One of the innovations, for the purpose of surveys and aiming campaigns accurately, had been to break down consumers into four categories: A, B, C-i and C-2. A was upper class, B was middle class, C-i was upper working class or lower middle class, in that range, and C-2 was plain working
class.
"The "The
perfect C-i!" she said. perfect C-i?"
done her hair herself. She's wearing a Marks & Spencer knitted dress. She bought her shoes at Lotus. She's carrying a shopping basket" with this she moved right up next to the woman and looked in the shopping basket "she's bought pre-cut wrapped bread" "she's she only barely turns back to him to announce all this out loud bought a box of Wiz detergent with five free plastic daffodils inside" and the poor woman wheels her head around resentfully but he wants to shout for joy: Bald! Delicious! A running commentary on a London "Yes! Look. She's
—
—
—
—
street
about a perfect C-i!
That night he took her
to the
Trattoria,
underneath those
and black metal cylinder lamps. He came on breezy, first-naming the waiters as he walked in, like ... a pal. Over the avocado vinaigrette he told her, conspiratorially, that the Agency was inevitable white plaster arches
still
hopelessly backward because
it
was run,
in
England, by the kind of
Englishmen who think a successful business is one where you can get educated men to work for you for £2,000 a year and come to work dressed as if they make £10,000. After the wine he told her: "I've got the neuroses of New York and the decadence of London."
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
376
—
—
She thought that was god! great. So he sprang it, spontaneously as he could manage it, on many occasions thereafter. He also took to wearing black knit ties. Somehow they have become the insignia of MidAtlantic Man. He got the idea from David Frost, who always wore one. Instead of using Cockney or Liverpool slang for humorous effect, narked, knickers-job and all that, he began using American hip-lowerclass slang, like, I mean, you know, baby, and a little late Madison Avenue. "Why don't we throw it " he would be speaking of somebody's
—
idea
— "and see
if it
skips across the
pond."
He
always brought the latest
American rock 'n' roll records back with him from New York, plus a lot of news of discotheques, underground movies, and people like Andy, Jane, Borden, Olivier.
He
always
made
a big point of telling
everyone
— and everyone — David! — New
he was expecting a call from New York, from David knew this was a big New York ad\ertising man David! that
York!
New
glass cliffs!
York!
— hot
—
line to the source!
— mine! mine! •
— land of flamingo
legs
and
•
•
But then there were a few disquieting developments. The waiters Trattoria began treating him like an American. He would at the come on all pally and they would do things like this: He would order some esoteric wine. Chateau whateveritwas, and they would bring him a bottle and pour out a little in his glass and he would taste it and pro-
—
pals, a waiter, would say, right good and then one of his out loud, in front of the girl he was with: We didn't have any more Chateau whateveritwas, sir, so I brought you Chateau thing, I hope it's all right, sir. All he can do is sit there and nod like a fool, because he has oh already tasted it and pronounced it good Chateau whateveritwas
nounce
it
.
.
.
—
Christ.
And
him as one an American who
then, at the Agency, the Americans began to treat
of them. There was this stupid
moment when A
—
,
above him, was going off on holiday, and he said to him, very solemnly, in front of several Englishmen: "Think about Pube-Glo for me while I'm gone." Not "think about the Pube-Glo account" or "work on the Pube-Glo ranged
just
campaign" but think about Pube-Glo, with that pure, simple American double-think loyalty to the product itself. He had to stand there, in front of other Englishmen, and solemnly agree to think about Pube-Glo.
What
was worse, he would have to show some evidence of having thought came back, which meant he would actually about Pube-Glo when A
—
have to spend time out of his concoction named Pube-Glo.
life
thinking about this vile fake-erotic
Tom The
hell of
it
Wolfe
377
was, he gradually found himself thinking English, not
Two New York — take over "hype up" was the term transmitted from New
necessarily wisely, but rather fundamentally.
came over York
to
— the
department, and he looked
art
at
them. They were dressed in
Sy Devore of Hollywood
flash clothes, sort of
Italians
style,
wearing tight pants
chubby hairdresser, and right away they began changing this and that, like some sort of colonial inspector generals. They were creeps even by New York standards. Even? Where was his love of that delicious, like a
cynical
.
.
baldness
.
.
.
.
New York trampled
he didn't sometimes want to say anything, but the more he went to New York attitude in New York was hard to take. He was in New the whole York, staying at George's big apartment on East 57th Street, and he had to get out to the airport. He had two huge heavy bags because it was just before Christmas and he was bringing back all sorts of things. So he half trundled them out to the elevator, and at length it arrived and he said to the elevator man: "Could you give me a hand with these, Part of
was back
it
in
to death. Jaysus, .
.
.
.
.
please?"
man
"I'm sorry, Mac," the elevator
My
job
is
running
this elevator.
It's
said, "I can't leave this elevator.
against the law,
running elevator," and so forth and so on, even bags on himself, a lecture all the way down. At the ground looked
and
at
the bags as
rainy,
floor the if
doorman command: to the
—
this
a
time
can't leave a
he had dragged the
doorman opened the door
they were covered with
and there was
after
I
pond of
flies.
Outside
for it
slush out from the curb.
summoning up
him but
was slushy
So he
said
the ancient accent of British
"Could you get me a cab, please." "No, I couldn't," the man says, with just a hint of mockery. "I would, Buddy, but I can't. I can't get no cab on a night like this. You'll have to take your best shot." Finally he flags down a cab, and both the doorman and the driver watch, with great logistic interest, as he navigates the bags through the pond of slush, getting his shoes and socks wet. In the cab he tells the man he wants to go to the airport, and he answers, in a hideous impersonation of a Cockney accent:
"Ow-kay, guv."
Then he
turns
up the car radio very loud
to
WQXR,
music station, apparently to impress him. The piece bly morose by that old fraud Stravinsky.
is
the classical
something horri-
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
378
Back
in
London he
learns that a few changes have taken place.
The
melon-jawed ball of fire who is 31 and once had a job doing whatever it was, somewhere, has been brought in at a high level as a an Meantime, Peter "consultant," and so has young Lady has suddenly been eleEtonian, an Oxonian, first cousin of Lord
Hon.
,
a
.
,
,
vated to his level after ten months with the firm.
And
gradually
it
be-
comes obvious. Advertising may be a new industry, it may be an American art, it may be a triumph of the New World, but in the competition for
new
eign clients
want
accounts, the clients
— they want
to feel they are
whatever, want to
lunch
at the
let
to be dealing with
as well as for-
an upper-class Englishman,
buying upper-class treatment for their £20,000 or their blood vessels dilate and their egos dilate over
Connaught with
— but wait
— English new money
a minute,
it
upper-class Englishmen
hang in the best of both worlds, and
can't all go back to that,
there, try to get that inviolable feeling again,
he
will
here amid the lyre-splat chairs, the bullion-fringe curtains, the old blacky Raeburn-style portraits, Roger! Have you met George? Cyril! Have you
met George? Keith! Have you and Peter. Pe-t-e-r ... he watches Peter's lip curdle. It is as if it is taking forever, as in a Cocteau film, old George's eyes are frozen in oh God of Fabrilex! none of these the panic-grinning bobble, and smart bastards are coming over for sherry after all, are they, ever, ever.
—
—
—
Roth
Philip
WHACKING OFF EXCERPT FROM
Then came adolescence bathroom door,
firing
Portnoys Complaint
— half my waking
my wad down my
it
I
which I stood in looked coming out. Or else
up
against the medicine-chest
dropped drawers so
was doubled over
mouth wide open, to take milk and Clorox on my own tongue and teeth
my
blindness and ecstasy,
Wildroot
Cream
Oil.
I
got
Through
it all
a world of
penis, perpetually in dread that
my
I
flying
fist,
how eyes
— though not infrequently,
in the
crumpled Kleenex and stained pajamas,
my
could see
I
that sticky sauce of butter-
pressed closed but
in
spent locked behind the
the toilet bowl, or into the soiled
clothes in the laundry hamper, or splat, mirror, before
life
pompadour,
like a blast
of
matted handkerchiefs and
moved my raw and
swollen
loathsomeness would be discovered
by someone stealing upon me just as I was in the frenzy of dropping my load. Nevertheless, I was wholly incapable of keeping my paws from my dong once it started the climb up my belly. In the middle of a class I
would raise a hand to be excused, rush down the corridor to the lavatory, and with ten or fifteen savage strokes, beat off standing up into a urinal. At the Saturday afternoon movie I would leave my friends to go off to and wind up in a distant balcony seat, squirting my the candy machine seed into the empty wrapper from a Mounds bar. On an outing of our family association, I once cored an apple, saw to my astonishment (and with the aid of my obsession) what it looked like, and ran off into the woods to fall upon the orifice of the fruit, pretending that the cool and
—
mealy hole was actually between the
me
legs of that
Boy when she pleaded
mythical being
who
what no girl in all recorded history had ever had. "Oh shove it in me. Big Boy," cried the cored apple that I banged silly on that picnic. "Big Boy, Big Boy, oh give always called
Big
for
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
380
me
all
you've got," begged the empty milk bottle that
I
kept hidden in
our storage bin in the basement, to drive wild after school with my vaselined upright. "Come, Big Boy, come," screamed the maddened piece of liver that, in
my own
butcher shop and, believe
way
to a bar It
man
was
it
I
mitzvah lesson.
my
the end of
at
year of masturbating
penis, just
bought one afternoon at a or not, violated behind a billboard on the insanity,
where the
freshman year of high school
— that
I
— and
fresh-
discovered on the underside of
shaft meets the head, a
little
my
discolored dot that has
had given myself cancer. All that pulling and tugging at my own flesh, all that friction, had given me an incurable disease. And not yet fourteen! In bed at night the tears no!" rolled from my eyes. "No!" I sobbed. "I don't want to die! Please But then, because I would very shortly be a corpse anyway, I went ahead since been diagnosed as a freckle. Cancer.
I
—
and jerked off into my sock. I had taken to carrying the dirty socks into bed with me at night so as to be able to use one as a receptacle upon retiring, and the other upon awakening. If only I could cut down to one hand-job a day, or hold the line at two, or even three! But with the prospect of oblivion before me, I actually began to set new records for myself. Before meals. After meals. During as usual
meals. Jumping up from the dinner table,
— diarrhea!
I
tragically clutch at
my
belly
—
have been stricken with diarrhea! and once behind the locked bathroom door, slip over my head a pair of underpants that I have stolen from my sister's dresser and carry rolled in a handkerchief in
my
I
cry,
I
pocket. So galvanic
— so galvanic
is
is
the effect of cotton panties against
the word "panties"
my mouth
— that the trajectory of my ejaculation
my joint like a rocket it makes right for the light bulb overhead, where to my wonderment and horror, it hits and it hangs. Wildly in the first moment I cover my head, expecting an reaches startling
new
heights: leaving
explosion of glass, a burst of flames
my
mind. Then quietly
sizzling
as
I
can
I
—
disaster,
you
see,
is
never
far
from
climb the radiator and remove the
gob with a wad of toilet paper.
I
begin a scrupulous search of the
—
shower curtain, the tub, the tile floor, the four toothbrushes God forand just as I am about to unlock the door, imagining I have covbid! ered my tracks, my heart lurches at the sight of what is hanging like snot
—
to the toe of
evidence I
is
my
shoe.
everywhere!
wonder even
as
I
I
am
Is it
the Raskolnikov of jerking off
— the sticky
my
ear? All this
to the kitchen table, scowling
and cranky,
on my
come back
cuffs too? in
my
hair?
grumble self-righteously at my father when he opens his mouth full of red jello and says, "I don't understand what you have to lock the door about. That to me is beyond comprehension. What is this, a home or a
to
Roth
Philip
Grand Central here never," well
—
everybody leave
will
privacy ... a
.
.
my
then push aside
reply,
I
".
station?"
— which
me
381
human
being
.
.
around
.
dessert to scream, "I don't feel
"
alone?
happen to like jello, even if I detest them after dessert I am back in the bathroom again. I burrow through the week's laundry until I uncover one of my sister's soiled brassieres. I string one shoulder strap over the knob of the bathroom door and the other on the knob of the linen closet: a scarecrow to bring on more dreams. "Oh beat it. Big Boy, beat it to a red-hot pulp " so I am being urged by the little cups of Hannah's brassiere, when a rolledup newspaper smacks at the door. And sends me and my handful an inch off the toilet seat. " Come on, give somebody else a crack at that bowl, After dessert
—
I
finish
because
I
—
—
you?"
will
I
my
my
recover
feelings. "I
to
father says. "I haven't
anyone
have a
in this
equilibrium, as
moved my bowels
my
is
—
quickening the tempo as
in the
my
week."
talent, with a burst of hurt
terrible case of diarrhea!
house?"
in a
Doesn't that
mean anything
meantime resuming the
stroke, indeed
cancerous organ miraculously begins to
quiver again from the inside out.
Then Hannah's
my
brassiere begins to move.
class,
and
fro!
I
veil
—
oh
ing weightily inside her blouse,
I
urge them up from their cups, and
LENORE LAPIDUS'S ACTUAL
over,
door
to
and behold! Lenore Lapidus! who has the biggest pair in my running for the bus after school, her great untouchable load shift-
eyes,
split
To swing
my mother
second that I
have
is
"Open up,
realize in the
vigorously shaking the doorknob.
finally forgotten to lock!
Caught! As good
TITS, and
I
knew
it
same
Of
the
would happen one day!
as dead!
open up this instant." It's locked. I'm not caught! and I see from what's alive in my hand that I'm not quite dead yet either. Beat on then! beat on! "Lick me, Big Boy lick me a good hot lick! I'm Lenore Lapidus's big fat red-hot brasAlex.
I
want you
to
—
siere!"
"Alex,
school?
in
Is
I
want an answer from you. Did you
that
why
French
fries after
you're sick like this?"
"Nuhhh, nuhhh." "Alex, are you in pain? Do you want me to call the doctor? Are you pain, or aren't you? I want to know exactly where it hurts. Answer
me.
"Yuhh, yuhh "Alex, "I
eat
want
all."
I
to see
—
don't want you to flush the toilet," says
what you've done
in there.
I
my mother sternly.
don't like the sound of this at
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
382
my father, touched as he always was by my accommuch awe as env> — "I haxen't moved my bowels in a
"And me," plishments
week,"
—
as
just as
whimper of
says
m\ perch on
lurch from
I
whipped animal,
a
the toilet seat, and with the
\iscous into the tiny piece of cloth where
m>
flat-chested eighteen-year-
old sister has laid her nipples, such as they are.
the da\
When
.
"Get toilet
will
I
begin to
when
I
told
>
ou not
come
It is
my
fourth orgasm of
blood?
you," says
in here, please,
something barely
dclixer three drops of
my
"Why did you
mother.
flush the
to?"
"I forgot."
"What was
in there that
\
ou were
so fast to flush
it?"
"Diarrhea."
"Was "1
it
mostly liquid or was
don't look!
I
mosth" poopie?"
it
me
didnt look! Stop saying poopie to
— I'm
high
in
school!"
"Oh. don't diarrhea,
I
\
ou shout
assure you.
at
me, Alex. I'm not the one
If all >"ou ate
\\ouldn't be running to the
who
was what you were fed
bathroom
fifty
at
gave you
home, you
Hannah
times a day.
tells
me
"
what you're doing, so don't think
I
don't know.
She's missed the underpants! Ire been caught! I'd just as
"You go
do
I
to Harold's
you eat French
Do you
fries
this,
"
she
.
.
me
be dead!
.?"
Hot Dog and Chazerai Palace
with
Mehin
calls to
after school? Jack,
my
"Look, I'm trying to
father,
after school
Weiner. Don't \ou? Don't
or do you not stuff > ourself w ith French
on Hawthorne A\enue hear
let
soon!
"Yeah, what do
either.
Oh,
come
now occup\ ing
move my
bowels,
"
fries
in here,
I
to
lie
and
me
and ketchup want you to
the bathroom.
he
replies.
"Don't
I
have
enough trouble as it is without people screaming at me when I'm tr>ing to mo\"e m\ bowels?" "You know w hat > our son does after school, the A student, who his ow n mother can't sa\" poopie to any more, he's such a grown-up? What do \ou think your grown-up son does when nobod\ is watching him? "Can I please be left alone, please? cries my father. "Can I have a "
"
little
can get something accomplished in here?" your father hears what you do, in defiance of
peace, please, so "Just wait
till
I
ever\'
me something. You're answer me this: how do you
health habit there could possibly be. Alex, answer
\ou know all the answers now, think Melvin Weiner gave himself colitis? \\'hy has that child spent half so smart,
his life in hospitals?"
"Because he eats
chazerai.''
"Don't vou dare make fun of me!"
Philip
"All right,"
I
it's
colitis?"
not a joke! Because to him a meal
O
Henry bar washed down by a bottle of Pepsi. Because his breakconsists of, do you know what? The most important meal of the day
an
fast
383
scream, "how did he get
"Because he eats chazerai! But is
Roth
your mother, Alex, but according — not according — and do you know what that just to
to the highest
child eats?"
nutritionists
"A doughnut." "A doughnut is right, Mr. Smart Guy, Mr. Adult. And coffee. Coffee and a doughnut, and on this a thirteen-year-old pisher with half a stomach is supposed to start a day. But you, thank God, have been brought up differently. You don't have a mother who gallivants all over town like some names I could name, from Barn's to Hahne's to Kresge's all day long. Alex, tell me, so it's not a mystery, or maybe I'm just stupid only tell me, what are you trying to do, what are you trying to prove, that you should stuff yourself with such junk when you could come home to a poppyseed cookie and a nice glass of milk? I want the truth
—
from you.
I
wouldn't
it
just
your father," she
her voice dropping
says,
must have the truth from you." Pause. Also Tell me, French fries, darling, or is it more?
significantly, "but
cant. "Is
tell
I
.
.
.
signifi-
please,
what other kind of garbage you're putting into your mouth so we can get to the bottom of this diarrhea! I want a straight answer from you, Alex. Are you eating hamburgers out? Answer me, please, is that why you was there hamburger in it?" flushed the toilet I don't look in the bowl when I flush it! I'm not inter"I told you
— — other people's poopie!" you are ested "Oh, oh, oh — thirteen years old and the mouth on him! To somein
like
one who
is
The utter become heavy
asking a question about his health, his welfare!"
incomprehensibility of the situation causes her eyes to
you getting like this, give me some clue? Tell me please what horrible things we have done to you all our lives that this should be our reward?" I believe the question strikes her as original. I believe she considers the question unanswerable. And worst of all, so do
with tears. "Alex,
why
are
me
I.
What have
is
precisely the horrible thing
Doctor! I
To
they done for
is
their lives, but sacrifice?
beyond
my
Yet that
understanding
— and
this still,
this day!
brace myself
coming
all
a mile away.
now
for the whispering.
I
can spot the whispering
We are about to discuss my father's
headaches.
on him today that he could hardly see straight from it?" She checks, is he out of earshot? God forbid he should hear how critical his condition is, he might claim exaggeration. "He's not going next week for a test for a tumor?" "Alex, he didn't have a headache
"He
is?"
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
384 "
'Bring
him
in,'
him
the doctor said. 'I'm going to give
a test for a
"
tumor.'
no good reason for me to be crying, but in this household everybody tries to get a good cry in at least once a day. My father, you must understand as doubtless you do; blackmailers account for a substantial part of the human community, and, I would imagine, of your clientele my father has been "going" for this tumor test for nearly as long as I can remember. Why his head aches him all the time is, of course, because he is constipated all the time why he is Success.
I
am
There
crying.
is
—
—
—
constipated
is
because ownership of
the firm of Worry, Fear
my mother
&
his intestinal tract
Frustration.
It is
hands of
in the
is
true that a doctor once said
he would give her husband
—
tumor if that would make her happy, is I believe the way that he worded it; he suggested that it would be cheaper, however, and probably more effective to
for the
man
does not
that
to invest in
make
it
any
a test for a
an enema bag. Yet, that less
I
know
heartbreaking to imagine
to
all this
my
be
so,
father's skull
open from a malignancy. Yes, she has me where she wants me, and she knows it. I clean forget my own cancer in the grief that comes comes now as it came then when I think how much of life has always been (as he himself very accurately puts it) beyond his comprehension. And his grasp. No money, no schooling, no language, no learning, curiosity without culture, drive without opportunity, experience without wisdom How easily his inadequacies can move me to tears. As easily as they move me splitting
—
—
.
.
.
to anger!
A life
person
my
father often held
was the theatrical producer
up
to
me
Billy Rose.
as
someone
to
emulate
in
Walter Winchell said that
knowledge of shorthand had led Bernard Baruch to hire him as a secretary consequently my father plagued me throughout high school to enroll in the shorthand course. "Alex, where would Billy Rose Billy Rose's
—
be today without his shorthand? Nowhere! So why do you fight me?" Earlier it was the piano we battled over. For a man whose house was without a phonograph or a record, he was passionate on the subject of a musical instrument.
"I don't
understand
why you won't
take a musical
beyond comprehension. Your little cousin Toby can sit down at the piano and play whatever song you can name. All she has to do is sit at the piano and play 'Tea for Two' and everybody in the room instrument, this
is
is
her friend. She'll never lack for companionship, Alex,
me
she'll
never lack
up the piano, and I'll have one in here tomorrow morning. Alex, are you listening to me? I am offering you something that could change the rest of your life!" for popularity.
Only
tell
you'll take
Philip
Roth
385
—
But what he had to offer I didn't want and what I wanted he didn't have to offer. Yet how unusual is that? Why must it continue to cause such pain? At this late date! Doctor, what should I rid myself of, tell me, the hatred ... or the love? Because I haven't even begun to mention everything
remember with pleasure
I
—
sense of loss? All those memories that
mean with a rapturous, biting seem somehow to be bound up I
with the weather and the time of day, and that flash into mind with such
poignancy, that momentarily office, or at
am
I
dinner with a pretty
not
history as crucial to
my
being as the
subway, or
in the
but back in
girl,
them. Memories of practically nothing
down
my
at
childhood, with
— and yet they seem moments of
moment
of
my
conception;
might
I
be remembering his sperm nosing into her ovum, so piercing gratitude
—
my
yes,
gratitude!
— so sweeping and unqualified
maybe
for the
"Look outside, baby," and sky."
The
first
I
line of poetry
first
time in
ever hear!
And
I
how
is
my
I
look: she says, "See? I
is
am standing my life), my mother
Yes, me, with sweeping and unqualified love!
kitchen (standing
my
love.
in the
points,
purple? a real
remember
it!
my
fall
a real fall
—
an iron-cold January day, dusk oh, these memories of dusk are going to kill me yet, of chicken fat on rye bread to tide me over to dinner, and the moon already outside the kitchen window I have just sky ...
It is
—
come
in with
hot red cheeks and a dollar
"You know what you're going lovingly to me, "for being such
to
have
I
have earned shoveling snow:
for dinner,"
my mother
coos so
Your favorite winter meal. Lamb stew." It is night: after a Sunday in New York City, at Radio City and Chinatown, we are driving home across the George Washington the Holland Tunnel is the direct route between Pell Street and Bridge Jersey City, but I beg for the bridge, and because my mother says it's "educational," my father drives some ten miles out of his way to get us home. Up front my sister counts aloud the number of supports upon a hard-working boy?
—
which the marvelous educational cables asleep with
my
face against
my
rest,
while in the back
I
fall
mother's black sealskin coat. At Lake-
weekend vacation with my parents' Sunday night Gin Rummy Club, I sleep in one twin bed with my father, and my mother and Hannah curl up together in the other. At dawn my father awakens me and like convicts escaping, we noiselessly dress and slip out of the room. "Come," he whispers, motioning for me to don my earmuffs and coat, "I want to show you something. Did you know I was a waiter in Lakewood when I was sixteen years old? Outside the hotel he points across to the beautiful silent woods. "How's that?" he says. We walk together "at a brisk pace" around a silver lake. "Take good deep breaths. Take in the piney air all the way. This is the best air in the
wood, where we go one winter
for a
"
—
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
386
world, good winter piney air." a parent!
I
couldn't be
more
— another poet
Good winter piney
thrilled if
air
were Wordsworth's
I
kid!
for
... In
summer he remains in the city while the three of us go off to live in a furnished room at the seashore for a month. He will join us for the last there are times, however, two weeks, when he gets his vacation when Jersey City is so thick with humidity, so alive with the mosquitoes that come dive-bombing in from the marshes, that at the end of his day's .
.
.
work he drives sixty-five miles, taking the old Cheesequake Highway the Cheesequake! My God! the stuff you uncover here! drives sixty-five miles to spend the night with us in our breezy room at Bradley Beach. He arrives after we have already eaten, but his own dinner waits while he unpeels the soggy cit\- clothes in which he has been making the rounds of his debit all day, and changes into his swimsuit. I carry his towel for him as he clops down the street to the beach in his unlaced shoes. I am dressed in clean short pants and a spotless polo shirt, the salt still my little boy's presteel wool hair, is showered off me, and my hair soft and combable is beautifully parted and slicked down. There is a weathered iron rail that runs the length of the boardwalk, and I seat myself upon it; below me, in his shoes, my father crosses the empty beach. I watch him neatly set down his towel near the shore. He places his watch in one shoe, his eyeglasses in the other, and then he is ready to make his entrance into the sea. To this day I go into the water as he
—
—
—
advised: plunge the wTists in
first,
then splash the underarms, then a
handful to the temples and the back of the neck
.
.
.
ah, but slowly,
alwa\s slowly. This way you get to refresh yourself, while avoiding a
shock to the system. Refreshed, unshocked, he turns to face me, comi-
waves farewell up
where he thinks I'm standing, and drops backward to float with his arms outstretched. Oh he floats so still he works, he works so hard, and for whom if not for me? and then at last, after turning on his belly and making with a few choppv' strokes that carr\' him nowhere, he comes wading back to shore, his streaming compact torso glowing from the last pure spikes of light driving in, over my shoulder, out of stifling inland New Jersey, from which I am being spared. And there are more memories like this one. Doctor. A lot more. This is my mother and father I'm talking about. cally
to
—
—
•
But sion of his
— but — but —
let
me
him emerging from
•
•
pull myself together
"Nothing,
"
says
my
is
also this vi-
the bathroom, savagely kneading the back of
neck and sourly swallowing a belch.
urgent you couldn't wait
— there
till I
came out
mother.
what
"All right, to
tell
me?
"It's settled."
"
is it
that was so
Philip
He it.
Roth
looks at me, so disappointed. I'm
"What did he do?" "What he did is over and done
move your
387
what he
with,
God
and
lives for,
willing.
I
know
You, did you
bowels?" she asks him.
"Of course I didn't move my bowels." "Jack, what is it going to be with you, with those bowels?" "They're turning into concrete,
that's
what
it's
going to be."
"
"Because you eat too "I don't eat
"How
fast.
too fast."
then, slow?"
"I eat regular."
"You
eat like a pig,
"Oh, you got
and somebody should
tell
you."
way of expressing yourself sometimes, do
a wonderful
you know that?"
my
"I'm only speaking the truth," she says. "I stand on
feet all
day
somewhere, and this one this one has decided that the food I cook isn't good enough for him. He'd rather be sick and scare the living daylights out of me." "What did he do?" "I don't want to upset you," she says. "Let's just forget the whole in this kitchen,
and you eat
thing." But she can't, so
like there's a fire
now
she begins to cry. Look, she
is
the happiest person in the world either. She was once a
of a
girl
whom
the boys called "Red" in high school.
probably not
tall
When
stringbean I
was nine
and ten years old I had an absolute passion for her high school yearbook. For a while I kept it in the same drawer with that other volume of exotica, my stamp collection. Sophie Ginsky the boys She'll
And
that was
go
my
Also, she
much
call
far with her big
"Red,"
brown eyes and her clever head.
mother!
had been secretary
without laurels in our
own
to the soccer coach,
an
office pretty
time, but apparently the post for a
World War. So I thought, at any rate, when I turned the pages of her yearbook, and she pointed out to me her dark-haired beau, who had been captain of the team, and today, to quote Sophie, "the biggest manufacturer of mustard in New York." "And I could have married him instead of your father," she confided in me, and more than once. I used to wonder sometimes what that would have been like for my momma and me, invariably on
young
girl
to hold in Jersey City during the First
the occasions
when my
father took us to dine out at the corner delicates-
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
388 sen.
look around the place and think,
I
all this
mustard."
"We would have manufactured
suppose she must have had thoughts
I
like that herself.
"He eats French fries," she says, and sinks into a kitchen chair to Weep Her Heart Out once and for all. "He goes after achool with Melvin Weiner and
stuffs
himself with French-fried potatoes. Jack, you
him what the end
I'm only his mother. Tell
is
tell
him,
going to be. Alex," she
where I am edging out of the room, "tateleh, it begins with diarrhea, but do you know how it ends? With a sensitive stomach like yours, do you know how it finally ends? Wearing a plastic says passionately, looking to
hag to do your business in!"
Who woman's
in the history- of the
My father. am
tears?
I
mother. Don't eat French
"Or "Or "Or "Or
fries
world has been
He
least able to deal
with a
me, "You heard your with Melvin Weiner after school." second.
says to
ever," she pleads.
my
ever,"
father says.
hamburgers out," she pleads. hamburgers out," he says.
''Hamburgers,^' she says bitterly, just as she might say Hitler, "where
they can put anything in the world in that they want Jack,
make him promise,
— and he
eats
them.
before he gives himself a terrible tsura, and
it's
too late." "I
promisef
where? Where I
tear off
freedom,
my
I
scream.
"I
promisef and race from the kitchen
to
else.
my
pants, furiously
I
grab that battered battering ram to
my mother begins to call from the "Now this time don't flush. Do you
adolescent cock, even as
other side of the bathroom door.
hear me, Alex?
I
—
have to see what's in that bowl!" Doctor, do you understand what I was up against? My wang was all really had that I could call my own. You should have watched her at I
work during polio season! She should have gotten medals from the March of Dimes! Open your mouth. Why is your throat red? Do you have a headache you're not telling me about? You're not going to any baseball game, Alex, until I see you move your neck. Is your neck stiff? Then why are you moxing it that way? You ate like you were nauseous, are you nauseous? Well, you ate like you were nauseous. I don't want you drinking from the drinking fountain in that playground. If you're thirsty wait until you're home. Your throat is sore, isn't it? I can tell how you're swallowing. I think maybe what you are going to do, Mr. Joe Di Maggio, is put that glove away and lie down. I am not going to allow you to go outside in this heat and run around, not with that sore throat, I'm not. I want to take your temperature. I don't like the sound of this throat
Philip
business one
bit.
To
be very frank,
I
Roth
am
389
actually beside myself that
you
have been walking around all day with a sore throat and not telling your mother. Why did you keep this a secret? Alex, polio doesn't know from baseball games. It only knows from iron lungs and crippled forever! I
want you running around, and that's final. Or eating hamburgers out. Or mayonnaise. Or chopped liver. Or tuna. Not everybody is careful the way your mother is about spoilage. You're used to a spotless house, you don't begin to know what goes on in restaurants. Do you know why your mother when we go to the Chink's will never sit facing the kitchen? Because I don't want to see what goes on back there. Alex, you must wash everything, is that clear? Everything! God only knows who touched don't
it
before you did.
Look,
am
I
exaggerating to think
it's
practically miraculous that I'm
The hysteria and the superstition! The watch-its and the beYou mustn't do this, you can't do that hold it! don't, you're an important law! What law? Whose law? They might as well
ambulatory?
—
carefuls!
breaking
have had plates
in their lips
themselves blue for
and
all
the
and
human
fiaishiks besides, all those
of their child
I
own
rings
private craziness!
through their noses and painted
meshuggeneh It's
rules
a family joke that
turned from the window out of which
"Momma, do we
storm, and hopefully asked,
Oh, and the milchiks and regulations on top
sense they made!
I
when
I
was a tiny
was watching a snow-
believe in winter?"
Do you
what I'm saying? I was raised by Hottentots and Zulus! I couldn't even contemplate drinking a glass of milk with my salami sandwich without giving serious offense to God Almighty. Imagine then what my conget
science gave
bred into
my
me
for all that jerking off!
bones!
What
in their
The
guilt,
the fears
— the
terror
world was not charged with danger,
where was the boldness and courage? Who filled these parents of mine with such a fearful sense of life? My father, in his retirement now, has really only one subject into which he can sink his teeth, the New Jersey Turnpike. "I wouldn't go on that thing if you paid me. You have to be out of your mind to travel on that thing it's Murder Incorporated, it's a legal" Listen, you ized way for people to go out and get themselves killed know what he says to me three times a week on the telephone and I'm dripping with germs, fraught with peril?
Oh, where was the
—
gusto,
—
—
only counting
when
I
pick
it
up, not the total
number
of rings
I
get
between six and ten every night. "Sell that car, will you? Will you do me a favor and sell that car so I can get a good night's sleep? Why you have to have a car in that city is beyond my comprehension. Why you want to pay for insurance and garage and upkeep I don't even begin to understand. But then I don't understand yet why you even want to live by
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
39©
What do you pay
yourself over in that jungle.
those robbers again for
A penny over fifty dollars a month and Why you don't move back to North Jersey is
that two-by-four apartment?
you're out of your mind. a mystery to
— fumes
me
—why
And my mother,
you prefer the noise and the crime and the
she just keeps whispering. Sophie whispers on!
go for dinner once a month,
it is
a struggle requiring
all
my
guile
I
and and
cunning and strength, but I have been able over all these years, against imponderable odds, to hold it down to once a month: I ring the bell, she opens the door, the whispering promptly begins! "Don't ask what kind of day I had with him yesterday." So I don't. "Alex," sotto voce still, "when he has a day like that you don't know what a difference a call from you would make. I nod. "And Alex and I'm nodding away, you know it doesn't cost anything, and it may even get me through "next week is his birthday. That Mother's Day came and went without a card, plus my birthday, those things don't bother me. But he'll be sixty-six, that's a landmark in a life. So you'll send Alex. That's not a baby, Alex "
"
—
—
—
—
a card.
It
wouldn't
kill
you."
Doctor, these people are incredible! These people are unbelievable!
These two are the outstanding producers and packagers of guilt in our time! They render it from me like fat from a chicken! "Call, Alex. Visit, Alex. Alex, keep us informed. Don't go away without telling us, please, not again. Last time you went away you didn't tell us, your father was ready to phone the police. You know how many times a day he called and got no answer? Take a guess, how many?" "Mother," I inform her, from between my teeth, "if I'm dead they'll smell the body in seventytwo hours, I assure you!" "Don't talk like that! God forbid!" she cries. Oh, and now she's got the beauty, the one guaranteed to do the job. Yet
how
could
I
expect otherwise?
mother? "Alex, longer will
to pick
up
we be around
a
Can
phone
to bother
is
I
my own how much
ask the impossible of
such a simple thing
you anyway?
—
"
Doctor Spielvogel, this is my life, my only life, and I'm living it in the middle of a Jewish joke! I am the son in the Jewish joke only it ain't no joke! Please, who crippled us like this? Who made us so morbid and
and weak? Why, why are they screaming still, "Watch out! Don't do it! Alex no!" and why, alone on my bed in New York, why am I still hopelessly beating my meat? Doctor, what do you call this sickness
hysterical
I
have?
Is this
the Jewish suffering
I
used to hear so
much
about?
Is this
what has come down to me from the pogroms and the persecution? from the mockery and abuse bestowed by the goyim over these two thousand lovely years? Oh my secrets, my shame, my palpitations, my flushes, my
Philip
me
I
391
respond to the simple vicissitudes of human life! Doccan't stand any more being frightened like this over nothing! Bless
sweats! tor,
The way
Roth
I
with manhood!
Enough being
Make me
brave!
Make me
strong!
a nice Jewish boy, publicly pleasing
privately pulling
my
putz!
Enough!
Make me
my
whole!
parents while
Beryl Bainbridge DINNER AT BINNY'S EXCERPT FROM
Injury
[Edward, a married man, has been having an
he
insistence,
his mistress's
Edward met was
filled
invites his friend
Simpson and
with Binny.
On Binny's
Muriel to dinner at
his wife
Ed.]
flat.
old
affair
Time
Hare and Hounds. The place businessmen pepping themselves up before returning
Simpson
with tired
for a drink in the
home. "I see
no reason why you shouldn't claim
entertainment," said Edward. the restaurant
"None
at
all.
a certain proportion for
Providing you can produce
bills."
"Quite so," agreed Simpson.
"But
I
don't feel
Not See what
we can
justifiably
put forward your wife's hairdress-
ing expenses.
for the golf club night
business.
I
and so
forth.
It's
not
strictly
mean?"
"Yes," said Simpson, disappointed. "I
Or
mean,
it's
not as
if
she's a hostess in a night club, for instance.
a television personality." "I
may have
misled you about the wife," Simpson
said. "She's
not
altogether sympatico to this evening."
"Good Lord," she was a
woman
cried
Edward, instantly alarmed.
thought you said
of the world?"
"She's that of course," said Simpson. "But the bit
"I
way she
sees
it, it's
a
not on."
"She will come, won't she?" asked Edward. He felt like hitting old Simpson between the eyes with his fist. All that rubbish he'd talked about it being a bit of a lark and what a terrific sport the old woman was. "The way she sees it," explained Simpson, "it's definitely a bit
Beryl Bainbridge
393
How
would you like it if Helen was meeting some fellow on the side and she asked me round to your house to meet him?" It seemed to Edward a highly unlikely situation, knowing what Helen thought about Simpson and fellows in general, but he nodded his head and pretended Simpson had a point there. "Put it another way," Simpson went on. "What if my wife asked tricky.
you and your lady friend to dinner behind my back? I trust you'd refuse." "Need you ask?" Edward said. "I don't want you to run away with the idea that the wife's narrow. She's not, believe you me. I'll tell you a little story. Keep it under your hat; I shouldn't like it to go any further. She got a proposition from a mutual friend of ours talk to
— her
"Whose
mine, as a matter of
well, wife of a friend of
X phoned
her X.
Let's call
—
the wife and said could she
fact.
come round and
wife?" asked Edward.
"Mine, of course," said Simpson.
— know
shouldn't get to
"I don't quite follow
"It
was absolutely
vital
that
Y
you," said Edward, mystified by Simpson's
alphabetical acquaintances. "Did your wife
tell
you she'd been proposi-
tioned?"
"Don't be dense," cried Simpson tioned.
testily.
"My
wife wasn't proposi-
X was."
Edward nodded. He didn't want to antagonize Simpson, not when Binny's dinner party hung in the balance. At this moment, he no longer cared about himself and the possibility of being "Yes, of course."
caught out.
He
thought only of Binny, slaving over a hot stove. "Stupid
my training, I suppose. Making sure the figures sort of thing. Do go on."
of me," he admitted.
add up
.
"It
.
.
that
for quite
of
X
was,
some
time.
wanted the wife
Met him
at
to lend out
X
was carrying on with Z. a masonic do last year. Upshot
seems," continued Simpson, "that
Had been it
"It's
our spare room
for the after-
noon."
"Good God," murmured Edward. Though he had and Z and was
totally
lost track
of
X
foxed by Y, he did sympathize with their general
predicament.
"The wife handled "She
said they could
it
rather cleverly,
I
thought," said Simpson.
have the room but would they please wash the
sheets out afterwards, or leave
money on
the table for laundering.
And
would they keep the window and the door open." "The window?" said Edward. He thought Simpson's wife must have a peculiarly coarse sense of humor. Or possibly she was a voyeur.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
394
romance out of it," cried Simpson with satisfaction. "Exposed it for what it was. Put the kibosh on it, no two ways about it." "Goodness, yes," said Edward, though it seemed to him, once they had come to some agreement about being spied upon, a small enough "Took
all
the
whole afternoon of love. He fought his way to the counter and ordered another two pints of beer and waited, pipe clamped in his mouth like a dummy, craning upwards to see his reflection in the mirror above the bar. He needed a haircut; a pale forelock dangled over one eye. He would have gone to he'd noticed a few raised eyebrows in the office the barber's days ago
price to pay for a
—
but Binny had once remarked she liked
thought
sometimes
as a fetlock.
wine, she called
— he
made him
his forelock
it
men
with untidy heads.
look rather boyish. Binny referred to
At others, when she'd taken a
his foreskin.
He it
two of
glass or
He'd better watch Binny's intake tonight
didn't feel Simpson's wife
would go
for that kind of table talk.
Always supposing she intended to be present. What on earth was he going to
tell
Binny
if
the Simpsons backed out at this late hour? She'd
sounded so argumentative on the telephone, though at the end she'd said he was lovely. She did care for him. She gave him her love mostly without trying to bind him, without endangering his marriage. It was true there 'd been a few unfortunate lapses, like the weekend she'd rung his house from some drinking club in Soho. He'd answered the phone himself, thank God, but it was frightfully tricky, standing in the hall in his pajamas in the middle of the night trying to convey through references to tax returns that he loved her, fearful of Helen on the landing listening to every word. There had been too that incident when he couldn't see Binny because he wanted to prune his roses, and she'd threatened to come round in the night and set fire to his garden. Later, a small corner of the lawn had been found mysteriously singed, but nothing had ever been proved. In the beginning he had fallen in love with her because she advised him they must live each day as if it was their it
last:
bearing in mind that any
was pointless
moment
to spoil the time they
had
the final whistle could blow,
left
with the making of impos-
demands. "You don't want to leave your wife," she'd said. "And I don't want you to." But as the months passed and she made various sible
disparaging remarks about married
men and
their duplicity,
it
occurred
him that possibly this was precisely what she required of him. It made him very uncomfortable. He tried once to bring the subject into the
to
open.
"We could be
and go "if
we
to
bed
in the
jolly
happy," he supposed. "We'd drink
afternoon"
far too
much
— Helen disapproved of the afternoon
lived together." Glaring at
him
as
though he'd uttered a
racist
Beryl Bainbridge
395
remark and snapping her rather large white teeth, Binny had cried, "You must be mad. Stark raving mad." It was confusing for him. He obviously served some purpose in her Often he was reminded of a Punch and Judy show he had watched on the sands at Eastbourne when he was a child. Hearing that nasal voice screaming above the incoming tide, "Who's a naughty boy, then?," and flinching at the sound of those repeated blows to the head, he had life.
not understood what was expected of him. Clutching his bucket and
known whether to laugh or cry. Binny could be so cold when standing up and facing him or shouting at him down the telephone, and so warm when lying in his arms. When he thought of those snatched perspiring moments on the sofa, the spade, he hadn't
bathroom
floor,
the divan bed in Binny's back room, he
forgive her anything
and dreamed of devoting the
felt
he could
rest of his life to
making her happy.
He at
paid for the drinks and returned to the table.
He
looked
down
Simpson's balding crown and said firmly, "Look here, old man. What's
the form tonight?
You
"Good Lord, "What about
are coming,
I
take
it?"
yes," said Simpson. "I wouldn't miss
it
for worlds."
the wife?"
"We're both coming," Simpson
said.
"Depend on
it.
I
just
wanted
warn you it might be a bit sticky at first. Muriel might be a shade offhand. But she'll thaw." He patted Edward's knee encouragingly. "You may find it a little bohemian tonight," said Edward. "Just a to
bit."
"Christ," cried Simpson. "I feared as
much. Muriel won't stand
for
you know." "I meant domestically," Edward said. "Spacewise, facilities knives and forks. See what I mean?" "Oh," said Simpson. "Rough and ready, is that it?" "A little," Edward said, feeling disloyal. "Binny's not one for apit,
.
.
.
pearances."
"Say no more." Simpson nodded sympathetically. "Are you going
home
to
change?"
"No," said Edward. "It's a shade awkward getting out again. I thought I might go back to the office and sign a little post." Simpson suggested Edward should come home with him for a wash-and-brush-up.
Then
they could
all
arrive together.
Edward accepted. "Have you mentioned to your wife," he said, "that we're supposed to have met? Her and me. Binny particularly stressed that
I
should invite close mutual friends."
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
396
"Don't push
it,
old boy," advised
Simpson with some
irritation. 'It's
enough to persuade her to sit down with you, let alone pretend you've been friendly for years. And you'd better watch the hanky been
difficult
panky."
"Hanky panky?" fooling about "Touching .
.
.
.
.
.
any outward show. Muriel won't
like it." "I
have to be
home by
eleven," said Edward. "I don't think there'll
be time for hanky panky."
No
further mention was
made
of his going back with Simpson for a
wash. After a quarter of an hour Simpson got up to go and said he'd see
him ribs.
twenty hundred hours.
in the trenches at
"Synchronize watches
He bought
.
what
ing heartily and thinking
goodbye.
.
.
we'll
He nudged Edward
go over the top together." Laugh-
a bloody ass the
a packet of
in the
cashew nuts
man
was,
Edward
said
to tide himself over until
dinner, and on an unfortunate impulse telephoned Binny.
"What do you want?" she
asked.
"Nothing
been chatting
bit foolish,
"How "I
really. I've just
to old
Simpson.
He was
a
thought."
I
surprising!"
meant he spoke
rather childishly. He's not as
broadminded
as
one thinks." Binny said. "Where are you?" "In the office," he lied. "Simpson said what would I think if Helen asked him and his wife round for a meal." "What are you on about? I thought they'd had dozens of meals at "What's
all
that noise?"
your house?" "I'm not explaining myself very clearly," he
said. "I get
the feeling
well, you know ..." he doesn't approve of "I don't know," she snapped. "Spit it out." .
.
.
"Us," he said lamely. "Carrying on."
ear,
She fell silent. Edward ground the receiver so to drown the pub sounds all around him, that
tightly against his
his eyes
began
to
water.
"You told me he'd been to a V.D. clinic," said Binny finally. Oh God, he thought, had he really confided that? She'd probably bring it up at dinner if things went badly. "Well, yes," he said. "But there was never anything actually wrong."
"Who
the hell does he think he
anybody carrying on." "I think," said Edward, "that
it's
is?
He's in no position to object to
his wife
more than him."
Beryl Bainbridgc
bet
"I'll it,
it
is,"
Binny crowed. "She probably
then her old Simpson's
"You
at
it
"Like bloody hell," she said, and told
He
a
you're doing
do love you, you know." him she must get on.
mystery to him; she had no small
talk at
all.
Here he began to compose a fairly reSimpson, indicating that he thought it inadvisable to
returned to the
sentful letter to
feels that if
too."
are clever," he said tenderly. "I
She was
397
claim such and such an
office.
amount
for the cleaning of his business premises.
would seem to me, in the circumstances, an unrealistic and preposterous sum, more in keeping with maintaining the hygienic standards of a research laboratory than a spare parts factory, and one which the Inspector of Taxes would undoubtedly and deservedly view with suspicion, etc., etc. ..." ".
.
.
It
•
Binny
laid
•
•
the dining-room table,
still
wearing her headscarf and
outdoor coat. Underneath she had changed into her best black
The
table
was situated
in the front half of the ground-floor
back half contained the kitchen. In
dress.
room. The
was a stove, a fridge and a very small draining-board. So great was Binny's abhorrence of cooking that she'd torn
down
it
the shelving and plastic work surfaces installed by a
previous owner and stacked everything article of furniture
man's wardrobe,
— food, crockery, pans — into an
she called a wall cupboard.
still
It
fragrant with the smell of
was, in reality, a gentle-
Havana
cigars,
complete
compartments for starched and detachable collars in which Binny kept the knives and forks. From the back window there was a view of a yard, a brick wall, and a rabbit hutch that Edward had given her. Moving about the table, cheerful and organized, Binny was interrupted by her daughter, Lucy, who was eighteen and dressed as though ready for work on a building site. "Screw me," cried Lucy, smiling for once, eyeing the cut flowers and the folded napkins. "Having a knees-up, are we?" She had known for days that Binny was expecting guests, but she liked to tease. She seized her mother by the shoulders and shook her. Binny's headscarf slithered over her eyes. "Who's a posh girl, then?"
with
little
"Don't, darling," said Binny.
Lucy flung herself sideways on plumped cushions. She began to roll should wear something more suitable,
to the sofa, crushing the
a cigarette. if I
She
newly
said critically, "I
were you. They'll think you're
not stopping."
Binny noted that her daughter's army boots, heavily studded, were scuffing a carpet already flecked with pieces of cotton thread and bits of
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
39^ fluff.
It
hadn't
had
when going down into
started to rain
felt like
she'd returned from the
bank and she
the yard to retrieve the hoover.
The
might have got wet and she didn't want to risk being electrocuted. Perhaps no one would notice the carpet once the drink started going down. inside
"I think, darling," said
Binny, "you'd better be
off. If that's all right
with you. Just pop the baby into the Evans', there's a good
The
baby,
who was
girl."
almost eleven years old, was quite capable of
climbing the fence and going up the steps to the house next door, but
Binny worried. "Where's big-dick?" asked Lucy. "Behave," pleaded Binny. She counted inwardly to ten and busied herself with titivating the table.
Her son
Gregor\', bribed with a
London on
note, was, she hoped, half-way across
pound
the underground,
bound for the house of his friend Adam. Lucy appeared to have fallen asleep. Cigarette papers and grains of tobacco littered her chest. "Will you get up?" said Binny. "At once. Please, dear."
There was very little left for her to do. She'd peeled the potatoes, washed the lettuce, sprinkled herb things on the meat. Still, she wanted her daughters out of the way. Being constantly with the children was like wearing a pair of shoes that were expensive and too small. She couldn't bear to throw them out, but they gave her blisters. It would be nice having Edward in the house with other people present. Adults. She could talk
about things without having to explain
repeating what she'd said in the
herself,
without endlessly
No one
would interrupt her with requests for jam, or money for the bus. Nobody would tell her to shut up. She liked Edward when he'd had a lot to drink. His eyes, bloodshot and sleepy, gazed at her with passion. She would be able to lean against him and give him the biggest lamb chop. When he went into the bathroom he would notice how clean the bowl was and the basin. She knew it was important to him that the house should look like a good first
place.
investment.
"Lucy," she said loudly. "Rubbish," Lucy
"It's
almost seven o'clock."
said. "It can't be.
We'd have heard Mrs. Papastav-
rou." Across the street was a post-war block of
on the
its
maiden voyage and
man from
totally deserted
flats, lit at
by day.
The
night like a ship
rent collector
and
the Providential were seen to walk along the concrete
The exception was Mrs. on the top floor, who had
balconies, but the inmates remained hidden.
Papastavrou, an elderly Greek originally
occupied a
flat
now
living
on the ground
of harm's way, after knifing the lady
floor
?nd been carried
who brought
aloft,
out
the meals-on-wheels.
Beryl Bainbridge
Mrs. Papastavrou had grown
399
and thin before the wounding. Her tray was collected with the food untouched on her plate. In an effort to stimulate her appetite the Council provided her with stuffed vine leaves and cartons of taramasalata. Thinking she was being victimized, Mrs. Papastavrou had struck back. Every evening since her removal upstairs, she appeared on the balcony on the dot of half past six and moaned loudly until seven o'clock. Sometimes, when the weather was particularly warm, she gave a matinee performance. Often, well-meaning passers-by called ambulances, but she was returned almost immediately. Binny looked out of the window to make certain the old woman remained indoors, and was appalled at the amount of refuse lying about the path. There were even eggshells caught in the branches of the privet hedge. "Ought
frail
sweep it up?" she asked aloud. A tub, placed on bricks, stood in front of the row of dust bins. In it was planted some sort of bush that never did anything. It had been meant to act as a screen. The bin lids had been stolen long ago. A fat dog from up the street kept waddling in and tipping out the garbage.
it."
I
to
"Sweep what?" said Lucy. "The front path. It's a sight." "Why not?" said Lucy. "You could dust the weeds while you're at She rolled off the sofa and lay face downwards, drumming on the
floor with her toe-caps.
would be dark when the Simpsons arrived, the headlamps of their car would light up the square of garden laid with crazy paving. Mrs. Simpson would see the rubbish clearly illuminated. Below the window was a strip of earth dangerously littered with strands of barbed wire, intended to discourage cats from doing their business on the stunted daffodils. Wrought-iron railings ran from the side of the front door, along the flower border, and ended at the steps to the basement flat. The basement was owned by a young couple, though Edward, in Binny 's presence, had once told a colleague that it was hers and she rented it out. Anxious to boast of her assets, he referred to the young couple as her tenants. Several betting slips, flung down by disappointed racing men, whirled upward from the path and, catching on the barbed wire, fluttered like sandwich flags among the daffodils. I can do no more, thought Binny, rubbing at the window pane with a duster. She could hardly be blamed for the untidy habits of dogs and gamblers. And even supposing Mrs. Simpson noticed the mess, it wasn't likely she'd rush in muttering her complaints before she'd had a chance
Even though
to
be introduced.
it
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
400
Pushing the matter from her mind, Binny moved from the window and, tripping over her daughter's body, ran headlong into the kitchen.
Lucy rose and went upstairs to fetch Alison. Binny knelt on hands and knees and picked up tobacco grains from the floor. A low keening began outside in the street. Hands clutching the rail, clouds scudding above her bowed head, Mrs. Papastavrou swayed backwards and forwards. It was as well, thought Binny, that the Simpsons weren't coming until eight o'clock. Edward pretended that he didn't mind about Mrs. Papastavrou, that he'd grown used to her. But he hadn't. He stood well back from the window, both saddened and embarrassed, while the children snickered with laughter and the old lady, marooned on her balcony, wailed like a banshee. "Alison won't," said Lucy, coming back into the room. "Well,
make
She was beyou if you would
her," shouted Binny, stamping her foot.
would be grateful to get your own things together as well. Have you got your nightdress?" "Don't be bloody wet," said Lucy. She went to the table and tore at a French loaf with her teeth. "I don't want to remind you of the shirt I bought you," Binny said. "Or the pair of shoes costing twenty-four pounds that you said you couldn't live without and promptly gave to your friend Soggy. When I was your age I was grateful if my mother gave me a smile." "I lent them, you fool," corrected Lucy. Binny's voice became shrill. "I've long since given up expecting gratitude or common courtesy, but I do expect you to get Alison and yourself out of the house. It's little enough to ask, God knows." "Keep your lid on," said Lucy. She began to comb her hair at the mirror. Strands of hair and crumbs of bread fell to the hearth. Binny could feel a pulse beating in her throat. She burned with fury. No wonginning to breathe quite heavily.
"I
der she never put on an ounce of weight.
The
daily aggravation the
children caused her was probably comparable to a five-mile run or an
hour with the skipping rope. Clutching the region of her heart and fighting for self-control, she said insincerely, "Darling, you can be very sensitive and persuasive. Just tell her Sybil's waiting and that there's ice
cream and things." "Lucy strolled or
I'll
into the hall
and
called loudly,
"Come down,
Alison,
bash your teeth in." After several minutes a sound of barking was heard
on the
first-
floor landing.
"Baby," crooned Binny, going upstairs with outstretched arms. Al-
Beryl Bainbridge
ison was it
on
all
was nothing
baring her
crouched against the wall. Binny often told friends worry about. Until two years ago Alison had insisted on
fours, to
tummy
lamp posts. doubtless she would soon grow tired of
button in the street and rubbing
She had grown out of that, pretending she was a dog.
"Come
401
as
along, darling," said Binny brightly.
it
against
She bent down and
patted her daughter's head.
Alison growled and seized Binny's ankle in her teeth. Putting both hands behind her to resist hitting the child, Binny
descended the stairs. Lucy was at the sink pouring cooking sherry into a milk "Out, out, out," cried Binny.
your layabout friends. This
is
"I
am
bottle.
not here to provide booze for
not an off-licence."
She frogmarched Lucy to the door and pushed her down the steps. Alison began to cry. Running down the path, Binny caught up with Lucy at the hedge and put desperate arms about her. She said urgently, "Now please, pull yourself together. Get your things, take your coat, and I'll give you a pound note to spend." Smirking, Lucy re-entered the house and began to put on her flying jacket. Smothering her youngest daughter in kisses, Binny took her to the door. She nodded blindly as Alison climbed the fence.
"You're crying.
Mummy,"
Her mouth quivered. Binny. "Don't you worry about me."
called Alison.
"I'm very happy, darling," said
She wiped her cheeks with her hand. "I'm going to have a lovely party." She stood there waving until Alison was let into the Evans'. Lucy had locked herself in the bathroom. Binny blew crumbs off the tablecloth and attended to the cushions on the sofa. She cut the end off the mutilated loaf and straightened the reproduction of The Last Supper that hung askew on the wall. Then she called gently down the hall that she would like to use the lavatory. snarled Lucy. "I'm trying to have a crap."
"Go away,"
Binny left a pound note on the table and climbed the stairs. She walked round and round her bedroom humming fiercely. At that moment she fully understood Mrs. Papastavrou, fluttering in the wind and protesting for
all
the world to hear.
Lucy shouted
After a time
"Well,
come
"I certainly
that she was off now. Binny kept silent.
on. Give us a kiss."
won't," called Binny. "You're far too rude."
The door slammed
violently. Instantly remorseful,
window and watched her daughter walk looked such a
little girl,
Binny ran
to the
sullenly along the gutter.
aggressively scuffing the
She
ground with the studs
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
402
of her massive boots. At the same age Binny had been married and looking after a house. She rapped frantically on the pane of
glass;
she
Lucy disappeared round the corner. Binny turned and banged her hip painfully against the edge of the ping-pong table. Every week she meant to advertise it for sale in the local newspaper. It had been bought three years ago for the children; she had hoped it might keep them off the streets. Selflessly she had moved her bed and her wardrobe into the back of the room so that there would be somewhere to put it. After six weeks of their constant bickering, turfing blew
kisses.
her personal belongings ruthlessly onto the landing to space, and bringing their friends in at
make
additional
hours of the day and night,
all
sometimes even when Binny was asleep, she had forbidden them the use of the room. They didn't seem to grasp how irritating it was for her to lie there with her face-cream on and be subjected to large
unknown youths
clambering under and over her bed in the pursuit of ping-pong
balls.
She
couldn't think where they learned such behavior, though she suspected it
was being taught
read and they had
move
in the schools. little
They
couldn't spell and they didn't
respect for property. Like a vast
army on the
they swarmed across the city playing gramophone records and
frequenting public houses.
It
wasn't that they disliked adults
Devoted
— they sim-
homes, it was obvious that they would never leave. The only edge they had on an earlier generation was their casual regard for animals; they didn't pull wings off flies or throw ply didn't notice them.
to their
stones at cats.
Rubbing her side, Binny was about to take off her coat when she heard a knock at the front door. Alarmed, she crept onto the landing. It could be any one of a number of people, none of them welcome Alison deceived over the ice cream and returning in tears, the woman from No. 52 looking for her cat, the arrears collector from the television rental service? It was too early surely for the Simpsons to have arrived.
Thinking fully
it
might be Lucy come back
went hope-
downstairs and opened the door.
"Are you the cleaning woman?" the
for a cuddle, she
hall.
stout black
man advanced
into
His neck was encased in plaster of Paris.
"No." said Binny. "I am bringing a message
you may have "I
A
a
for
you and
all
believing strangers, so that
chance of redemption."
don't really think I'm a believer," Binny said.
"The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous," claimed the man, taking no notice. His own eyes were fixed on a point directly above
Beryl Bainbridge
Binny's
403
shoulder. "His ears are open to their prayers, but the face of
left
do evil. And who if you be followers of that which is good?" the Lord
is
against
them
that
moment,
"I'm rather busy at the "All that "Still,"
He
asks
is
that
"
relieved to see
he that
will
harm you
said Binny.
you should follow Him."
protested Binny, "I haven't
She was
is
much
time."
Edward stepping out of
a taxi at the curb,
holding several bottles in his arms.
"Luke persons
xv:7,"
preached the black
who need no
repentance?"
man relentlessly. "Who are the just He was watching the stairs, as if
somebody to appear. Edward came up the path. Binny thought he looked terribly attracShe usually thought that when he came towards her unexpectedly; it wore off. Lucy addressed him as "Fatso" whenever she saw him;
waiting for
tive.
later
but
really, in his
dark City suit and his shirt with the pale
stripe,
he
seemed very trim and dapper. He reminded Binny of a pre-war father come home ready for his Ovaltine pipe in mouth, the evening newspaper under his arm. She did find him attractive, but when he went on about his roses or blew his nose like a trumpet or fell over when he stood on one trembling leg to remove his sock, she was at a loss to understand
—
why. "Are you going somewhere?" he demanded.
"It's
gone seven, you
"
know. "This gentleman's from the Bible," said Binny. ing a
little
"We were
just
hav-
chat."
"Well,
I
should hurry
them and went
"Now
it
up
if I
were you." Edward pushed past
into the kitchen.
that your man's
home," the black man decided,
"I'd best
be
want his tea." He told her he'd leave a copy of his magazine and she ought to look at the questions at the back. Possibly when he called next week she'd have answered a few of them. "I shouldn't count on it," said Binny, stung at the speed with which he was prepared to be on his way now that "her" man had returned. He hadn't minded wasting her time; it hadn't occurred to him that she too might have been wanting her tea. Edward poured her out a drink before she went upstairs to do her he admired the flowers in the face. He congratulated her on the table center. He forbore to mention that the vase could do with a wash. "Food smells good," he said, anxious to be appreciative.
going. He'll
—
"There's nothing cooking yet," she said.
He
sat
"It isn't
time."
her on his lap and, relinquishing his pipe, kissed her. She
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
404
couldn't respond wholeheartedly because of her headscarf. She
felt
faded
and work-worn.
He
"Are the children gone?"
said huskily,
She nodded. "Can't
we go
"No," she "I've
upstairs?"
said.
had the
"I'm not in the mood. Lucy was awful."
devil of a day," said
Edward. "One thing
after an-
"
other.
"She made Alison
cr\'."
"The telephone never stopped "I feel
odd,
— and
"
ringing."
she confided. "That
man
telling
me
there was nothing "
on when I was out shopping people kept waving. Edward attempted to push his hand inside the front of her coat but
to fear
it
was
earlier
tighth- buttoned.
"Why my
door?" she asked.
"Vd knock on your door, Edward said urgently. "Any time." "You've been drinking," said Binny. She suddenly remembered the drawing into the curb and felt resentful. He never came in his car in "
taxi
somebody recognized the number plate and imagine why you think you've had the de\il of a eight-course lunches and visits to the pub "Three," he corrected. "Nobod\ cooked my lunch. And look at the case
told his wife. "I can't
—
because he thought people of
this
— world
"He didn tried to
was time
for
>our
What
wa>" that
with your
man
ran off
Talk about the chosen
tea.
look chosen to me," said Edward.
t
"Somebody obviously
break his neck."
He wanted back.
it
day.
She
Binn>- to get into the bath so that he could scrub her
said she'd already bathed,
and he
said
why
didn't
he get
in the
bath then and she could wash his back. "I'm not ha\"ing you wallowing and snorting in told him,
and went
upstairs to take off her coat
and
my clean
bath," she
scarf.
cramped bedroom and combed her hair. She felt crushed, flattened in some way. It was Edward's fault, coming in a taxi like that and not wanting to know about Lucy being rude. He always slid away when she mentioned the children. Of course, his own son was too busy learning Latin and Greek and generalh' behaving like Little Lord Fauntleroy to cause him a moment's trouble. Why, she wondered, was Edward always tr>ing to get her into soapy water? It must have some connection with his days at boarding school; he probably thought it more hygienic to do it in the bath. She stood
in the
Beryl Bainhridge
She
didn't
know why she
were over and done with
and even
She
if
—
it
felt
405
so despairing inside. All the big issues
wasn't likely
now
that she'd get pregnant
she did, nobody, not even her mother, was going to
tell
her
have any financial problems, she didn't hanker after new carpets. She didn't hanker after anything certainly not Edward with a off.
didn't
—
block of soap in one hand and that pipe spilling ash
down her
spine.
She was compelled suddenly to stand very still. She felt like an animal in long grass scenting smoke on the wind. She saw her reflection in the dressing-table mirror; she was holding a green comb to her head and staring fixedly at the glass. It had been the same this morning when she was out with Alma; only then there had been so much noise, so many faces with insinuating smiles voices calling her name. Was it because she'd sent Lucy away without kissing her? Was Gregory lying battered by football hooligans on the floor of a tube train to Clapham? With the children gone, the whole house was heavy with silence. It was Edward, she decided, who was upsetting her. He lived too much in the past; all that rubbish about his dormitory and the shadows on the playing fields. He evaded her completely. He should be dragged, by that schoolboy lock of hair falling over one nostalgic eye, into the present. She was fed up with his fumblings on the sofa, as if it was still those days before the war when mothers kept coming in and out with trays of tea and courting was a furtive thing. Why couldn't he pretend that he longed to leave his wife, so that she in return could pretend she wished he would? He ought to forget the ins and outs of capital transfer tax, and the particular type of pest that plagued his fruit bushes, and discuss what he did with Helen at night when she'd come back from all those meetings. They could have a row over it and be moved to tears, and then they both might feel something, some emotion that would nudge them closer to one another. Obviously he did do something with
—
Helen.
He was
far
too uncomplicated a
man
to abstain
when
there was
body lying next to him in bed, and apart from his roses it wasn't as if he had any hobbies to take his mind off sex. Old Simpson was quite right a
to disapprove of his carryings on.
What Edward should
do, she told
though discussing somebody she had never met, was to park his car actually outside the house. In full view. After he made love he should lie there dozing and not trot into the darkness desperate for a taxi. Though he removed his socks and even put down his pipe during the act, he could not bring himself to unbuckle the watch from his wrist. Sometimes, when he lay exhausted on top of Binny, a little to one side with his cheek resting on his arm, she knew he was looking squint-eyed herself, as
at
the time.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
4o6
She put away her comb and brushed the shoulders of her dress. That was the worst of black, it showed the slightest speck of dust; by the time she'd cooked the dinner she'd be spotted with grease. Except for the end of that French loaf, Lucy probably wouldn't have a bite of food until tomorrow morning. It was madness putting complete strangers before one's own flesh and blood. She had enough to do fighting hormone losses and hot flushes and depressions that dropped out of nowhere, without being tormented by
guilt.
Belligerently she flung
who was
ward,
down
the clothes-brush and returned to Ed-
seated at the table with the evening newspaper spread
before him. "I
think
I
should
start
"Yes," he agreed.
It
cooking," she said. "Don't you?"
was, he realized, ten minutes to eight.
"Can
I
help?"
But he didn't move.
He and Binny had
another glass of wine.
She was sure the Simpsons were late. She kept asking the time, but Edward answered casually, saying, "What? Oh, the time Jolly early if you ask me." It wouldn't do to get her into a state. After half an hour Binny said the chops were ruined. Greatly alarmed, he rose to his feet. "Well, almost," she amended. "What shall I do with them?" He didn't know what to advise. Helen produced perfectly edible meals in an effortless way, and he was a bit throve n by the atmosphere of Danic generated by Binny at the stove. .
.
.
"Well, look at them," Binny shouted, bringing the grilling tray to
the table and thrusting the chops under his nose.
They were
a
little
"They're lovely," he
said.
wizened, he thought, but otherwise normal.
"Simply lovely."
"Don't you ever do any cooking?" she asked. There was a hostile note in her voice.
He
bent over the crossword and prayed the Simpsons would arrive
soon.
Some minutes
later
Binny demanded
to
know
if
he did any
washing.
"Washing?" he queried, playing
"Do you wash your
for time.
"
smalls?
"We've a washing machine," he said. "Even for your smalls?" "It's for everything," he said. "Big or small." She wanted him to describe his washing arrangements in detail. It seemed a funny thing to be interested in. "Well," he said.
Beryl Bainbridge
my
407
and so bag in the bathroom and Helen places them, machine." "I
put
clothing, underpants, socks
"And you coal-heaving or
let
underpants
some just
in
in a
polythene
due course,
in the
her?" Binny cried, as though they were discussing equally strenuous job.
Inwardly he grew his
forth,
was unfair of Binny
rattled. It
because the Simpsons were
about the chops. "Look here," he protested,
"I
to attack
him over
and she was worried have enough to do in the late
you know, without worrying about the washing. Helen's in all day. It's no trouble if you've got a machine. Besides, I don't know how to load the thing. As a matter of fact she won't let me touch it. It's her office,
department.
"Do you sleep with her?" The question was so unexpected he'd suffered a minor stroke.
"You
"My
mouth
fell
open.
He
felt
he began inadequately.
love,"
do, don't you?"
"No, no," he protested. truth. "She's not
She's gone off
one
He knew
she knew he was not telling the
for that sort of thing,"
he floundered. "Not now.
it."
Binny abandoned her place
She smiled
that his
at
the stove and
came
to
sit
at the table.
lovingly at him.
He said uneasily, "I do care for you, you know. I really do." "We all go off it," said Binny. "Us women." She held her
fourth
and drank. "Until somebody exciting comes along. Like you," she added generously and, reaching out, attempted to touch his cheek. glass of
wine
He
to her lips
ducked, thinking she was going to
strike
"Take Helen," she continued. "She's used
him. to you.
You're the old
sod that's part of the furniture."
he felt, a flattering description. Still, Binny was smiling in an affectionate manner. He allowed her, without flinching, to caress his It
wasn't,
face.
"You're not a mystery any more," she told him. "Probably stayed very
someone
still
she'd run a duster over you. But
she'd never set eyes on, well
.
.
.
if
a bloke
came
if
you
along,
stands to reason, doesn't
it?"
"Does it?" he said. Binny withdrew her hand and thumped the table. "I bet you if the milkman rushed in and grabbed old Helen, she wouldn't say no." "Perhaps not," he said dubiously. He had a mental picture of his wife moving serenely about the kitchen in her housecoat, and the youth from United Dairies running through the door in his striped apron and
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
4o8
"Of course," he said. "There's always the possibility' that she might phone the police instead." Outside it had grown dark. The block of flats across the street was transformed into a glittering mass of glass and concrete. Behind net curtains shadowed with the leaves of rubber plants, blurred figures moved across rooms that blazed with light. "Six letters," said Edward, looking down at his paper. "Beginning flinging her to the floor.
with T." "Terror," said Binny.
"A hard
case," said Edward. "Turtle."
And he
pencilled
it
in.
Woody
Allen
THE KUGELMASS EPISODE
Kugelmass, a professor of humanities married for the second time.
two dull sons by
his
first
Daphne Kugelmass was an
wife, Flo,
was unhappily
at City College,
and was up
to his
oaf.
neck
in
He
had alimony and also
child support.
know it would turn out so badly?" Kugelmass whined to his one day. "Daphne had promise. Who suspected she'd let herself
"Did analyst
I
go and swell up
like a
beach
in itself a healthy reason to
kind of operating nut
I
marry a person, but
have.
You
Kugelmass was bald and "I affair.
I
need
may
need
softness,
late
want
I
to
to
she had a few bucks, which
ball? Plus
see
as hairy as a bear,
make
flirtation.
love in Venice, trade quips at
You
see
must be
can't afford a second divorce.
— "Mr. Kugelmass
to
have an
needs romance. it's
I
too
and exchange coy
affair will solve
noth-
deeper."
Kugelmass continued.
really sock
it
to
"I
me."
anyone at City College, because Daphne also works Not that anyone on the faculty at C.C.N.Y. is any great shakes,
"But there.
need
what I'm saying?"
"An
discreet,"
Daphne would
'21,'
much
You're so unrealistic. Your problems run also this affair
"I
man who
Dr. Mandel shifted in his chair and said,
"And
but he had soul.
I'm not getting younger, so before
glances over red wine and candlelight.
ing.
doesn't hurt, with the
it
meet a new woman," he went on. need
not
my point?"
not look the part, but I'm a I
is
it
can't be
but some of those coeds ..."
"Mr. Kugelmass
"Help me.
I
—
had
a
dream
last night.
I
was skipping through a
meadow holding a picnic basket and the basket was marked And then I saw there was a hole in the basket."
'Options.'
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
410
"Mr. Kugelmass, the worst thing you could do
is
simply express your feelings here, and together we'll analyze
have been After
in
treatment long enough to
his chair.
And
need
I
phone
is
no overnight
cure.
in their
is
a magician,"
Kugelmass
said, rising
with that he terminated his therapy.
A couple of weeks later, around
there
I'm an analyst, not a magician."
all,
"Then perhaps what from
know
You must them. You
act out.
while Kugelmass and
apartment one night
like
Daphne were moping
two pieces of old furniture, the
rang.
Kugelmass said. "Hello." "Kugelmass?" a voice said. "Kugelmass, "I'll
get
it,"
this
is
Persky."
"Who?" "Persky.
Or should
I
say
The Great
Persky?"
"Pardon me?" "I
hear you're looking
exotica into your
life?
over town for a magician to bring a
all
little
Yes or no?"
"Sh-h-h," Kugelmass whispered. "Don't hang up.
Where
are
you
calling from, Persky?"
Early the following afternoon, Kugelmass climbed three
flights
of
broken-down apartment house in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn. Peering through the darkness of the hall, he found the door he was looking for and pressed the bell. I'm going to regret this, he stairs in a
thought to himself.
Seconds later, he was greeted by a short, thin, waxy-looking man. "You re Persky the Great?" Kugelmass said. "The Great Persky. You want a tea?"
want romance. I want music. I want love and beauty." "But not tea, eh? Amazing. O.K., sit down." Persky went to the back room, and Kugelmass heard the sounds of boxes and furniture being moved around. Persky reappeared, pushing before him a large object on squeaky roller-skate wheels. He removed some old silk handkerchiefs that were lying on its top and blew away a bit of dust. It was a cheap-looking Chinese cabinet, badly lacquered. "Persky," Kugelmass said, "what's your scam?" "No,
I
"Pay attention," Persky
oped
it
said.
"This
is
some
beautiful effect.
for a Knights of Pythias date last year, but the
I
devel-
booking
fell
through. Get into the cabinet."
"Why, so you can stick "You see any swords?"
it
full
of swords or something?"
Kugelmass made a face and, grunting, climbed into the cabinet. He couldn't help noticing a couple of ugly rhinestones glued onto the raw plywood just in front of his face. "If this is a joke," he said.
Woody
"Some
joke.
Now,
Allen
411
here's the point. If
cabinet with you, shut the doors, and tap
I
it
throw any novel into three times, you
this
will find
yourself projected into that book."
Kugelmass made
grimace of disbelief.
a
"My hand to God. Not just a novel, either. A short story, a play, a poem. You can meet any of the women created by the world's best writers. Whoever you dreamed of. You could carry on all you like with a real winner. Then when you've had enough "It's
you give
the emess," Persky said.
and
a yell,
see you're back here in a split second."
I'll
you some kind of outpatient?" "I'm telling you it's on the level," Persky said. Kugelmass remained skeptical. "What are you telling me that this cheesy homemade box can take me on a ride like you're describing?" "Persky, are
—
"For a double sawbuck."
Kugelmass reached he
for his wallet.
believe this
"I'll
when
I
see
it,"
said.
Persky tucked the
bills in his
pants pocket and turned toward his
who do you want to meet? Sister Carrie? Hester Prynne? Ophelia? Maybe someone by Saul Bellow? Hey, what about Temple Drake? Although for a man your age she'd be a workout." bookcase. "So
"French.
I
want
to
have an
affair
with a French lover."
"Nana?" "I
don't want to have to pay for
Wdr and Peace?" know! What about Emma Bovary? That sounds
"What about Natasha "I said
French.
I
it."
in
to
me perfect." "You got
it,
Kugelmass.
enough." Persky tossed
"You sure
this
is
Give
me
a
holler
when
you've had
paperback copy of Flaubert's novel. safe?" Kugelmass asked as Persky began shutting in a
the cabinet doors. "Safe.
Is
anything safe
in this crazy
world?" Persky rapped three
times on the cabinet and then flung open the doors.
Kugelmass was gone. At the same moment, he appeared in the bedroom of Charles and Emma Bovary's house at Yonville. Before him was a beautiful woman, standing alone with her back turned to him as she folded some linen. I can't believe this, thought Kugelmass, staring at the doctor's ravishing wife. This
is
uncanny. I'm here.
It's
her.
Emma "Who
turned in surprise. "Goodness, you startled me," she said. are you?" She spoke in the same fine English translation as the
paperback. It's
simply devastating, he thought. Then, realizing that
it
was he
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
412
whom
she had addressed, he said, "Excuse me. I'm Sidney Kugelmass.
A
I'm from City College.
professor of humanities. C.C.N.Y.? Uptown.
I
— oh, boy!" Emma Bovary smiled flirtatiously and said, "Would you like a drink? A glass
of wine, perhaps?"
Kugelmass thought. What a contrast with the troglodyte who shared his bed! He felt a sudden impulse to take this vision into his arms and tell her she was the kind of woman he had
She
beautiful,
is
dreamed of all his life. "Yes, some wine," he
Make
it
said hoarsely. "White.
No,
red.
No, white.
white."
"Charles
is
out for the day,"
Emma
said,
her voice
full
of playful
implication.
After the wine, they went for a
and rescue
me
from the monotony of
said, clasping his
so ... so
this crass rural existence,"
hand. They passed a small church.
have on," she murmured. "It's
the lovely French country-
always dreamed that some mysterious stranger would appear
side. "I've
It's
stroll in
"I've
never seen anything
Emma
what you around here.
"I love
like
it
modern."
called a leisure suit,"
he
said romantically. "It
was marked
down." Suddenly he kissed her. For the next hour they reclined under a tree and whispered together and told each other deeply meaningful things with their eyes. Then Kugelmass sat up. He had just remembered he had to meet Daphne at Bloomingdale's. "I must go," he told her. "But don't worry,
I'll
be back."
hope so," Emma said. He embraced her passionately, and the two walked back to the house. He held Emma's face cupped in his palms, kissed her again, and "I
yelled, "O.K., Persky!
I
got to be at Bloomingdale's by three-thirty."
There was an audible pop, and Kugelmass was back in Brooklyn. "So? Did I lie?" Persky asked triumphantly. "Look, Persky, I'm right now late to meet the ball and chain at Lexington Avenue, but when can I go again? Tomorrow?" "My pleasure. Just bring a twenty. And don't mention this to anybody."
"Yeah. I'm going to
call
Rupert Murdoch."
Kugelmass hailed a cab and sped off to the city. His heart danced on point. I am in love, he thought, I am the possessor of a wonderful secret. What he didn't realize was that at this very moment students in various classrooms across the country were saying to their teachers,
"Who
is
this
character on page loo?
A
bald Jew
is
kissing
Madame
Bo-
Woody
A
vary?"
Allen
413
teacher in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, sighed and thought,
and
Jesus, these kids, uith their pot
acid.
What goes through
their minds!
Daphne Kugelmass was in the bathroom-accessories department at Bloomingdale's when Kugelmass arrived breathlessly. "Where've you been?" she snapped. 'i
got held
Kugelmass
up
"It's
four-thirty."
in traffic,"
Kugelmass
visited Persky the
again passed magically to Yonville. at seeing
him.
The two
said.
next day, and in a few minutes was
Emma
couldn't hide her excitement
spent hours together, laughing and talking about
their different backgrounds. Before
Kugelmass
left,
they
made
love.
"My
God, I'm doing it with Madame Bovary!" Kugelmass whispered to himself. "Me, who failed freshman English." As the months passed, Kugelmass saw Persky many times and developed a close and passionate relationship with Emma Bovary. "Make sure and always get me into the book before page 120," Kugelmass said to the magician one day. "I always have to meet her before she hooks up with this Rodolphe character." "Why?" Persky said. "You can't beat his time?" "Beat his time. He's landed gentry. Those guys have nothing better to do than flirt and ride horses. To me, he's one of those faces you see in the pages of V^omens Wear Daily. With the Helmut Berger hairdo. But to her he's hot stuff.
"And her husband
suspects nothing?"
"He's out of his depth. He's a lacklustre
thrown
little
paramedic who's
go to sleep by ten, and
in his lot with a jitterbug. He's ready to
on her dancing shoes. Oh, well See you later." And once again Kugelmass entered the cabinet and passed instantly
she's putting
to the
.
Bovary estate
at Yonville.
"How you
.
.
doing, cupcake?" he said to
Emma. "Oh, Kugelmass,"
Emma sighed.
"What
I
have to put up with. Last
night at dinner, Mr. Personality dropped off to sleep in the middle of the dessert course. I'm pouring
and out of the blue "It's
I
my
heart out about Maxim's and the ballet,
hear snoring."
O.K., darling. I'm here now," Kugelmass
said,
embracing
her.
he thought, smelling Emma's French perfume and burying his nose in her hair. I've suffered enough. I've paid enough analysts. I've searched till I'm weary. She's young and nubile, and I'm here a few pages after Leon and just before Rodolphe. By showing up I've
earned
this,
during the correct chapters,
I've
got the situation knocked.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
414
Emma,
be sure, was
happy as Kugelmass. She had been starved for excitement, and his tales of Broadway night life, of fast cars and Hollywood and TV stars, enthralled the young French beauty. "Tell me again about O. J. Simpson," she implored that evening, as she and Kugelmass strolled past Abbe Bournisien's church. "What can I say? The man is great. He sets all kinds of rushing records. Such moves. They can't touch him." "And the Academy Awards?" Emma said wistfully. "I'd give anything to win one." "First you've got to be nominated." "I know. You explained it. But I'm convinced I can act. Of course, I'd want to take a class or two. With Strasberg maybe. Then, if I had the right agent
to
—
"We'll see, we'll see.
That
speak to Persky."
I'll
night, safely returned to Persky's
the idea of having
"Let
just as
me
Emma visit him
think about
in the big city.
Persky
it,"
Stranger things have happened."
Kugelmass brought up
flat,
said.
Of course,
"Maybe
neither of
I
could work
it.
them could think
of one. •
"Where the at
hell
do you go
her husband as he returned
all
•
•
Daphne Kugelmass barked that evening. "You got a chippie
the time?"
home late
stashed somewhere?"
"Yeah, sure, I'm
Leonard Popkin.
know Popkin.
just the type,"
Kugelmass
was with
We were discussing Socialist agriculture in Poland. You
He's a freak on the subject.
"
"Well, you've just been very odd lately," Just don't forget about
"Oh,
said wearily. "I
sure, sure,"
my
father's birthday.
Kugelmass
said,
On
Daphne
said.
"Distant.
"
Saturday?
heading for the bathroom.
"My whole family will be there. We can see the twins. And Cousin Hamish. You should be more polite to Cousin Hamish he likes you."
—
bathroom door and shutting out the sound of his wife's voice. He leaned against it and took a deep breath. In a few hours, he told himself, he would be back in Yonville again, back with his beloved. And this time, if all went well, he would bring Emma back with him. At three-fifteen the following afternoon, Persky worked his wizardry again. Kugelmass appeared before Emma, smiling and eager. The two spent a few hours at Yonville with Binet and then remounted the Bovary "Right, the twins," Kugelmass said, closing the
carriage. Following Persky's instructions, they held
closed their eyes, and counted to ten.
When
each other
tightly,
they opened them, the
Woody up
carriage was just drawing
Allen
at the side
Kugelmass had optimistically reserved a
415
door of the Plaza Hotel, where suite earlier in the day.
dreamed it would be," Emma said as she swirled joyously around the bedroom, surveying the city from their window. "There's F. A. O. Schwarz. And there's Central Park, and the I see. It's too divine. Sherry is which one? Oh, there On the bed there were boxes from Halston and Saint Laurent. Emma unwrapped a package and held up a pair of black velvet pants "I love
it!
It's
everything
I
—
"
against her perfect body.
"The
slacks suit
like a million
"I've
bucks
in
is
by Ralph Lauren," Kugelmass
it.
Come
Guggenheim and
Emma squealed as she stood before the
on the town.
I
want
to see
Chorus Line and the
Nicholson character you always
this Jack
look
on, sugar, give us a kiss."
never been so happy!"
mirror. "Let's go out
said. "You'll
talk about.
Are any of his flicks showing?" "I cannot get my mind around this," a Stanford professor said. "First a strange character named Kugelmass, and now she's gone from the book. Well, I guess the mark of a classic is that you can reread it a thousand times and always
find
something new." •
The
•
•
Kugelmass had told Daphne Boston and would return Monday.
lovers passed a blissful weekend.
he would be away at a symposium in Savoring each moment, he and Emma went to the movies, had dinner in Chinatown, passed two hours at a discotheque, and went to bed with a TV movie. They slept till noon on Sunday, visited SoHo, and ogled celebrities at Elaine's. They had caviar and champagne in their suite on Sunday night and talked until dawn. That morning, in the cab taking them to Persky's apartment, Kugelmass thought, It was hectic, but worth it. I can't bring her here too often, but now and then it will be a charming contrast with Yonville.
Emma
climbed into the cabinet, arranged her new boxes of clothes neatly around her, and kissed Kugelmass fondly. "My place next time," she said with a wink. Persky rapped three times on the
At Persky's,
cabinet.
Nothing happened.
"Hmm,"
Persky said, scratching his head.
He
rapped again, but
no magic. "Something must be wrong," he mumbled. "Persky, you're joking!" Kugelmass cried. "How can "Relax, relax. Are you still in the box, Emma?" "Yes."
Persky rapped again "I'm
still
— harder
here, Persky."
this time.
it
still
not work?"
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
4l6 "I
know,
"Persky,
darling. Sit tight."
we have
married man, and
I
have a
class in three hours. I'm
anything more than a cautious "I can't
Kugelmass whispered. "I'm a
to get her back,"
understand
affair at this point."
Persky muttered.
it,"
not prepared for
"It's
such a
reliable little
trick."
But he could do nothing.
going to take a
"It's
while," he said
little
down. I'll call you later." Kugelmass bundled Emma into a cab and took her back to the Plaza. He barely made it to his class on time. He was on the phone all day, to Persky and to his mistress. The magician told him it might be several days before he got to the bottom of the trouble. to
Kugelmass. "I'm going to have to
"How was
the symposium?
"
strip
Daphne asked him
"Fine, fine," he said, lighting the
"What's wrong? You're
"Me? Ha,
He
filter
end of a
that night. cigarette.
as tense as a cat."
that's a laugh.
going to take a walk."
it
I'm as calm as a
summer
night. I'm just
eased out the door, hailed a cab, and flew to
the Plaza.
no good," Emma said. "Charles will miss me." "Bear with me, sugar," Kugelmass said. He was pale and sweaty. "This
He
is
kissed her again, raced to the elevators, yelled at Persky over a pay
phone
in the Plaza lobby,
and
just
made
it
"According to Popkin, barley prices stable since 1971,
"
he
said to
home in
before midnight.
Krakow have not been
Daphne, and smiled wanly
as
this
he climbed
into bed. •
The whole week went by
On
•
•
like that.
Friday night, Kugelmass told
Daphne
there was another sym-
one in Syracuse. He hurried back to the Piaza, but the second weekend there was nothing like the first. "Get me back into the novel or marry me," Emma told Kugelmass. "Meanwhile, I want to get a job or go to class, because watching TV all day is the
posium he had
to catch, this
pits."
"Fine.
We
can use the money," Kugelmass
twice your weight in "I
he said
room
might be
"Who
is
this
"You consume
service."
met an Off Broadway producer I
said.
in Central
right for a project he's doing,"
Park yesterday, and
Emma said.
clown?" Kugelmass asked.
"He's not a clown. He's sensitive and kind and cute. His name's Jeff
Something-or-Other, and he's up for a Tony." Later that afternoon, Kugelmass showed up at Persky 's drunk. "Relax," Persky told him. "You'll get a coronary."
Woody "Relax.
The man
room, and shamus." a hotel
"O.K., O.K.
I
Allen
417
says relax. I've got a fictional character stashed in
my
think
We know
wife
is
having
me
tailed
by a private
problem." Persky crawled under the cabinet and started banging on something with a large wrench. "I'm
like a wild
town, and
mention
Emma
animal," Kugelmass went on. "I'm sneaking around
and
I
have had
up
it
to here with
each other. Not to
a hotel tab that reads like the defense budget."
"So what should all
there's a
I
do? This
the world of magic," Persky said.
is
"It's
nuance."
"Nuance, my foot. I'm pouring Dom Perignon and black e^gs into this little mouse, plus her wardrobe, plus she's enrolled at the Neighborhood Playhouse and suddenly needs professional photos. Also, Persky, Professor Fivish Kopkind,
been jealous of me, has
who
teaches
identified
me
Comp
and who has always
Lit
as the sporadically
acter in the Flaubert book. He's threatened to go to
and alimony;
me
jail.
For adultery with
Madame
Bovary,
appearing char-
Daphne.
I
see ruin
my wife will
reduce
to beggary."
"What do you want me
to say? I'm
your personal anxiety goes, that cian, not an analyst." far as
By Sunday afternoon,
I
working on can't help
it
night and day. As
you
with. I'm a magi-
Emma
had locked herself in the bathroom and refused to respond to Kugelmass's entreaties. Kugelmass stared out the window at the Wollman Rink and contemplated suicide. Too bad this is a low floor, he thought, or I'd do it right now. Maybe if I ran away to Europe and started life over Maybe I could sell the International Herald Tribune, like those young girls used to. The phone rang. Kugelmass lifted it to his ear mechanically. .
"Bring her over," Persky
.
.
said. "I
think
I
got the bugs out of
Kugelmass's heart leaped. "You're serious?" he
said.
it."
"You got
it
licked?" "It
was something
in the transmission.
Go
figure."
"Persky, you're a genius. We'll be there in a minute. Less than a
minute."
Again the lovers hurried to the magician's apartment, and again Emma Bovary climbed into the cabinet with her boxes. This time there was no kiss. Persky shut the doors, took a deep breath, and tapped the
box three times. There was the reassuring popping noise, and when Persky peered inside, the box was empty. Madame Bovary was back in her novel. Kugelmass heaved a great sigh of relief and pumped the magician's
hand.
"It's
over," he said. "I learned
my
lesson.
I'll
never cheat again,
I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
4l8
swear
it."
He pumped
Persky's
hand again and made
a
mental note to
send him a necktie. •
Three weeks answered
later, at
his doorbell. It
•
•
the end of a beautiful spring afternoon, Persky
was Kugelmass, with a sheepish expression on
his face.
"O.K., Kugelmass," the magician "It's just this
once," Kugelmass
"Where to this time?" "The weather is so lovely, and
said.
said.
I'm not getting any younger. Listen, you've read Portnoys Complaint?
Remember The Monkey?" "The price is now twenty-five up, but
I'll
start
you off with one
dollars,
freebie,
because the cost of
due
to
all
the trouble
living I
is
caused
you.
"You're good people," Kugelmass
combing his few remaining "This'll work all right?"
said,
he climbed into the cabinet again. "I hope. But I haven't tried it much since all that unpleasantness." "Sex and romance," Kugelmass said from inside the box. "What we
hairs as
go through for a pretty face." Persky tossed in a copy of Portnoys Complaint and rapped three times on the box. This time, instead of a popping noise there was a dull explosion, followed by a series of crackling noises and a shower of sparks.
Persky leaped back, was seized by a heart attack, and dropped dead.
The
cabinet burst into flames, and eventually the entire house burned down.
had his own problems. He had not been thrust into Portnoy's Complaint, or into any other novel, for that matter. He had been projected into an old textbook. Remedial Kugelmass, unaware of
this catastrophe,
Spanish, and was running for his
word tener ("to have") on its spindly legs.
—a
large
life
over a barren, rocky terrain as the
and hairy
irregular verb
— raced
after
him
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Earn Extra $$$ Selling Door-to-Door
on of war, designed to outwit fleeing enemy soldiers who try zig-zagging away from the line of fire as they retreat across The weapon is a specially designed all-Bulgas/electric/coal/diesel/steam machine gun, meant to out-zig and out-zag the most adroit foe by firing bent bullets from a crooked barrel and sending a deadly fusillade across the enemy's rear in a twisted trajectory. Trials during the recently concluded Bulgarian Army War Games, using captured Armenian border violators as the mock enemy, showed the deadly gun to inflict a promising number of casualties, some of them on the mock the battlefield.
garian
enemy. Another plan for the ingenious device, according Bulgarian Army sources, is to donate it to an enemy.
to
Novel Wristwatch Is Also Salt and Pepper Shaker, Toothpick Holder A New York firm has introduced wrist watch. Fog-proof
a "gadgeteer's
and claimed accurate
dream"
of a
to within one
month per minute, the 2-jewel Swiss-assembled timepiece is not only a means of counting the hours but also a fine magnetic compass, a sterling silver salt-and-pepper shaker, a toothpick match caddy, a change purse, a boiled-egg timer, a calendar, a table of measurements and weights, a mirror, an amusing game of skill, a wrist heater, a spare-button bank, a magnifying glass, a tourniquet, and a weed killer. The handsome device weighs less than 4 oz. but handily combines all
holder, a
these functions
by
careful design
and following the
principles
of miniaturization. Sportsmen, military men, aviators, busi-
nessmen, ship captains, musicians, hobbyists, and underwater explorers are expected to be ready customers.
Discarded Spat Makes Grand Overcoat for Chilly Rabbit A Rhode
Island
man has found a handy use for an He chose the cleanest one of the two
unused pair of spats. and, with no glue or
nailing, converted the dressy accessory into a snug-fitting winter "coat" for his pet rabbit, which he had noticed would often shiver in its cage behind the house. The second spat is held in reserve as the man plans to acquire a second pet rabbit by and by. In this way whole rabbit "families" can be outfitted against the elements and America's forgotten spats put to work instead of lying in closets. The trick with the "spat coat" is to anchor the understrap firmly to the rabbit. As rabbits tend to nervousness, the strap must be drawn tightly against the belly and cinched to stay. Slippage is countered by wiring the strap in position.
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Calvin Trillin DINNER AT THE DE LA RENTAS'
January ly, 1981
Another week has passed without
Even
that overstates
my
my
being invited to the de
standing. Until
I
read in The
New
la Rentas'.
York Times
Magazine a couple of weeks ago about the de la Rentas having become "barometers of what constitutes fashionable society" ("Frangoise and Oscar de la Renta have created a latter-day salon for le nouveau grand monde the very rich, very powerful and very gifted"), I wasn't even aware of what I wasn't being invited to week after week. Once I knew, of
—
course,
it
hurt.
Every time the phone rang,
thought
I
it
with an invitation ("Mr. Trillin? Frangoise de
must be Mrs. de la
Renta Renta here. We're havla
ing a few very rich, very powerful and/or very gifted people over
Sunday
evening to celebrate Tisha B'av, and we thought you and the missus
might
like to join us").
Kansas City to ask
if
The phone
I'm sure
I
rang.
It
was
sent a thank-you
my mother calling from note to my Cousin Edna
Edna and six other cousins went in on for our wedding gift in 1965. The phone rang. An invitation! Fats Goldberg, the pizza baron, asked if we'd like to bring the kids to his uptown branch Sunday night to sample the sort of pizza he regularly describes for the place setting of stainless
as "a
gourmet tap-dance." "Thanks, Fat Person, but
I'll
have to phone you,"
I
said.
"We may
have another engagement Sunday."
The phone quit ringing. "Why aren't I in le nouveau grand monde?"
I
asked
my
wife, Alice.
"Because you speak French with a Kansas City accent?" she asked in return.
"Not
at all,"
I
said.
"Sam
Spiegel, the
Hollywood producer,
is
a
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
428
regular at the de la Rentas', and
I
hear that the
last
time someone asked
"
French he said 'Gucci.' "Why would you want to go there anyway?" Alice said. "Didn't you read that the host is so phony he added his own 'de la' to what had been plain old Oscar Renta?" "Who can blame a man for not wanting to go through life sounding
him
to speak
like a taxi driver?"
veau grand monde. Diana Vreeland says Henry Kissinger
Vicomtesse de Ribes says 'Frangoise worships
by accomplishment
vited
le
nou-
star.
The
"Family background's not important in
said.
I
— taking over
is
the
intelligence.'
You
get in-
perfume company, maybe, or
a
invading Cambodia."
"Why
don't
we
just call Fats
met tap-dance?" Alice said. "Maybe it would help Oscar de disloyal
la
Renta,"
I
downing Mrs.
d's
you
if
said.
and
tell
him
we'll
be there for a gour-
started wearing dresses designed
"Some
by
of his guests say they would feel
chicken fricassee while wearing someone
else's
merchandise." Alice shook her head. dresses that look like
prom," she
what the
"Oscar de fat girl
la
made
a
Renta designs those
ruffly
bad mistake wearing
to the
said.
"Things were a old-rich goyim,
and
lot easier all
individually rejected,"
I
when
fashionable society was limited to
the rest of us didn't have to worry about being said.
"At least they knew better than to mingle socially with their dressmakers," Alice
Would
I
Kosinski, after tually
said.
be ready all,
if
told the
the de
la
Rentas phoned?
think of
set it,
novelist Jerzy
Times that evenings with them were
demanding." Henry Kissinger, the
Rentas
The
"intellec-
star himself, said that the
"an interesting intellectual standard"
— although,
de
come
la
to
that phrase could also be applied to Fats Goldberg.
began to polish my dinner-table chitchat, looking first to the person I imagined being seated on my left (the Vicomtesse de Ribes, who finds it charming that her name reminds me of barbecue joints in Kansas City) and then to the person on my right Alone
at the
kitchen table,
I
(Barbara Walters, another regular,
who
has tried to put
me
at
my
ease
by confessing that in French she doesn't do her r's terribly well). "I was encouraged when it leaked that the Reagan Cabinet was going to be
made up I
of successful managers from the world of business,"
expected them
all
I
say, "but
to be Japanese."
Barbara and the Vicomtesse smile. Alice, the kitchen, looked concerned.
who had
just
walked into
Calvin Trillin
429
"Listen," Alice said. "I read in the Times that Mrs. de la Renta
very
strict
Maybe
about having only one of each sort of person
at a
is
dinner party.
they already have someone from Kansas City."
mentioned that Mrs. d is so careful about not including more than one stunning achiever from each walk of life Possible. Jerzy Kosinski
("she understands that every profession generates a few princes or kings")
he and Norman Mailer have never been at the de la Rentas' on the same evening ("when I arrive, I like to think that, as a novelist, I'm unique"). Only one fabulous beauty. Only one world-class clotheshorse. that
Then As
tage.
I
I
realized that the one-of-each rule could
envisioned
it,
before dinner guests are fifteen
He and Nancy
convention
darling!" Mrs.
will
d
my
to
advan-
Henry Kissinger phones Mrs. d only an hour to arrive. He had been scheduled to pick up
grand that night for explaining
ers Association
work
in
SALT
to the Vinyl
II
Manufactur-
Chicago, but the airports are snowed
be able to come to dinner after
all.
"How
in.
marvelous,
says.
She hangs up and suddenly looks stricken. "My God!" she says to Oscar. "What are we going to do? We already have one war criminal coming!"
What and
tell
down What
to
do except
to
phone the man who
him the dinner had
to
with a painful skin disease
be called off because Mr. d had
known
as the
do about the one male place at the Vicomtesse de Ribes and Barbara Walters? The phone rings. "This is Frangoise de to
"This
is
conflicts with the star
Calvin of the Trillin,"
I
say.
Seventh Avenue Shpilkes.
table
la
"I'll
come
now empty
— between
Renta," the voice says.
be right over."
Dan Greenburg HOW TO
more
BE A JEWISH
MOTHER
mother than being Jewish and a mother. Properly practiced, Jewish motherhood is an art a complex network of subtle and highly sophisticated techniques. Fail to master these techniques and you hasten the black day you discover your children can get
There
is
to being a Jewish
—
along without you.
You
will
be called upon to function as a philosopher on two distinct
types of occasions:
Whenever anything bad happens. (2) Whenever anything good happens. Whenever anything bad happens, you must (i)
point out the fortunate
aspects of the situation:
"Ma! Ma!" "What's the commotion?"
"The bad boys ran off with my hat!" "The bad boys ran off with your hat? You should be didn't also cut
your throat."
Also point out that Bad Experience
"Maybe next time It's
grateful they
you'll
know
is
the best teacher:
better than to fool with roughnecks.
the best thing that could have happened to you, believe me."
Whenever anything good happens, you must,
of course, point out
the unfortunate aspects of the situation:
"Ma! Ma!" "So what's the trouble now?"
"The Youth Group Raffle! I won "You won a Pontiac automobile nice.
The insurance
alone
is
gomg
to
a Pontiac in the
send us
con\ ertible!"
Youth Group to the
Raffle? Ver)"
poorhouse."
Dan Greenburg Underlying
all
431
techniques of Jewish motherhood
is
the ability to
and harvest guilt. Control guilt and you control the child. An old folk saw says: "Beat a child every day; if you don't know what he's done to deserve the beating, he will." A slight modification gives us the Jewish mother's cardinal rule: "Let your child hear you sigh every day; if you don't know what he's done to make you suffer, he will." To master the Technique of Basic Suffering you should begin with an intensive study of the Dristan commercials on television. Pay particplant, cultivate
ular attention to the face of the actor
lips
—
eyes, the furrow of the brow, the
drained sinus cavities or severe
This
is
has not yet taken Dristan.
downward curve the pained expression which can only come from eight un-
Note the squint of the of the
who
gastritis.
the Basic Facial Expression. Learn
a mirror several times a day. If
what you are doing, "I'm fine,
it's
it
well. Practice
someone should catch you
at
When
before
and ask
say:
nothing
at all,
it
will
go away." This should be said
but audibly, should imply suffering without expressing
softly
it
it
properly executed, this
is
the Basic
Tone
it
openly.
of Voice.
Here are some practice drills: (1) Give your son Marvin two sport shirts as a present. The first time he wears one of them, look at him sadly and say in your Basic Tone of Voice:
until
"The other one you didn't like?" (2) Borrow a tape recorder and practice the following key phrases you can deliver them with eye-watering perfection: (a) "Go ahead and enjoy yourself." (b)
"But be careful."
(c)
"Don't worry about me."
mind staying home alone." (e) "I'm glad it happened to me and not to you." (3) Remember, the child is an unformed, emotionally unstable, ignorant creature. To make him feel secure, you must continually remind him of the things you are denying yourself on his account, especially when others are present. And here are Seven Basic Sacrifices to Make for Your Ghild: (1) Stay up all night to prepare him a big breakfast. don't
(d)
"I
(2)
Go
without lunch so you can put an extra apple in his lunch
pail.
Give up an evening of work with a charitable he can have the car on a date. (3)
(4)
Tolerate the
girl he's
dating.
institution so that
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
432
him know you fainted twice in the supermarket from fatigue. (But make sure he knows you're not letting him know.) (6) When he comes home from the dentist, take over his toothache (5)
Don't
let
Open
his
for him.
bedroom window wider so he can have more fresh air, and close your own so you don't use up the supply. Wherever possible, make your old clothes do the job of new ones. Old clothes are more substantial than new ones, anyway, because in the old days they made things to last. Be an example to your family in this area. Be certain, of course, that they are aware of your sacrifices: (7)
"Well, I'm glad to say
I
won't be needing a
new winter coat
this
year
after all."
"Oh? How's "I
of
my
Women's Section of the Sunday paper one, and now it's warm as toast."
glued the
old
If this
later
that, Esther?"
has not
left
the desired impression, follow
inside the lining
it
up
a few days
with a seeming contradiction: "Well,
I
finally
broke
down and
did
it.
I
bought something
for
myself.
"Good. What did you buy, Esther?" "I hated to spend the money, believe me, but today
my
I
bought a small
roll
of Scotch tape to hold
will
Should no old clothes or hand-me-downs be available, then you have to think about buying new clothes at a regular store. If no one
stockings together."
garment business, ask your druggist or the vegetable man to suggest the name of a store he's heard of. There's no point in going to a store that does not have a strong recommendation. When you take your child to the store, keep these important points in
your family
in
mind:
is
in the
buy a color that will show the dirt. buy a fabric that will wear out. (2) buy a style that is apt to change. (3) buy a garment that fits it should always be two or three (4) sizes too large so that the child can grow into it. The most efficient way to buy clothes for any child below the age of 22 is to utilize him merely as a dressmaker's dummy and to address all questions about the fit or the appearance of the garment directly to the (1)
Never Never Never Never
—
salesman:
me, how does it fit in the crotch?" "It looks pretty good from here, ma'am." Should the child object to any garment that has been selected "Tell
for
Dan Greenburg
he talked to his mother like that when he was a The salesman will not let you down.
him, ask the salesman boy.
Never
fear.
Just as
433
if
Mother Nature abhors
an empty mouth.
It
shall therefore
a
vacuum, the Jewish mother abhors
be your purpose to
fill
every
mouth
you can reach with nourishing food. At mealtimes, be sure there is a continuous flow of food from stove to serving platter to plate to mouth. If anyone should be foolish enough to decline a particular dish (e.g., potatoes), proceed as follows:
Find out whether he has any rational objections:
(1)
"What do you mean no
potatoes, Irving
— you think I'm trying
to
poison you?"
Suggest that he take only a small amount as a compromise:
(2)
"Take only
a sliver of the potatoes, then."
But remember, only a sliver." (3) You may now proceed to fill his plate with potatoes. The instant he has crammed down the last one, you must be ready to: (4) Offer him a second helping: "All right.
"There,
told
I
you you'd
like
it
once you tasted
All right
it.
now,
you're ready for seconds?"
"God, no." Here you must
be on your
Between your question and his answer, little more than one microsecond will elapse. Within that microsecond, you must scoop all the rest of the potatoes out onto his plate and make the turn back to the kitchen. When the last crumb has been cleared from all plates by means of vague references to privation in Europe, you are ready for the real test of your "I
art.
really
toes.
Begin with a general all-inclusive warning:
am now
ready to begin serving third helpings."
Immediately switch from the general to the
specific.
Select your
quarry:
you are ready for a third helping of chicken." "Believe me, Sylvia, if I took one more piece of chicken I would "Eddie,
I
can
tell
sprout feathers."
The
next step in the ritual
calls for a
statement about your quarry
addressed to the spectators:
way I cook chicken." "I'm crazy about the way you cook chicken, Sylvia. "Eddie doesn't
like
the
I
simply cannot
eat another particle without bursting."
"You prepared
You
like
it
happen to know that chicken is Eddie's favorite dish. I specially for him but do you think he cares? Eddie, tell me.
see,
I
chicken?"
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
434
"Yes."
"You
like
my
chicken?"
"Yes, yes."
"You
are too full to eat any more?"
"Yes, yes, yes." "All right. This this
it
can understand.
can understand.
I
after
I
all.
not
It's
All right. (Pause.)
So
A man
says to
me,
'I
am
too
full,'
you are asking me to throw it out, wrap it up in wax paper and you'll take
like
I'll
for later."
Your
job as hostess
properly fed.
You must
is
not complete
see to
it
when your
guests have
been
that they are also entertained.
Your family and friends will expect you to be able to relate amusing stories which you have heard at the butcher shop, at a meeting of Hadassah, or which your husband has told at a previous gathering of these same people. Familiarize yourself with the following formula for successful storytelling and in no time at all you will have a widespread reputation as a raconteuse.
To
begin the telling of any story:
Ask whether anybody has heard it before. "Listen, you all know the story about the old Jewish man?" (i)
It is
important that
this initial
query be as general as possible, so
anybody who has heard the story before should not recognize it and hence have it spoiled for him. The next step is: (2) Ask someone else to tell it. "Listen, it's a very funny story. About an old Jewish man. Morris,
that
you
tell it."
"I don't
know
the story you mean, Esther."
"Of course you know. Don't you? The story about the old Jewish man. Go ahead, you tell it, Morris. You know I can't tell a story properly."
This modesty
is
very becoming to a performer and will surely be
countered with heartfelt
now
ready (3)
cries of denial
to:
Explain where you heard the story. in dry goods. Melnick.
You all You know the
doesn't matter to the story, believe me.
Anyway, Rose
"All right. This story
I
heard originally from Rose Melnick.
know Rose? No? Her husband one? All
from your audience. You are
right,
Melnick heard
it it
is
from her son-in-law, Seymour,
nose-and-throat man.
Seymour Rosen
a lovely boy, really.
A
— you know the name?"
By now your audience has been sufficiently prepared for the story and will be anxious for you to begin. Go ahead and tell it, but be sure to: (4) Begin the story at the end. Professional comedians call the end
Dan Greenburg of the story "the the story,
it is
punch
line." Since this
435
is
usually the funniest part of
logically the best place to start:
"Anyway, there's this old Jewish man who is trying to get into the synagogue during the Yom Kippur service, and the usher finally says to him, 'AH right, go ahead in, but don't let me catch you praying.' {Pause.) Oh, did I mention that the old man just wants to go in and give a message to
somebody
synagogue?
in the
synagogue and pray, you
He
doesn't actually want to go into the
see. {Pause.
Frown.) Wait a minute.
I
don't
mentioned that the old man doesn't have a ticket for the service. You know how crowded it always is on Yom Kippur, and the old man doesn't have a ticket, and he explains to the usher that he has to go into the synagogue and tell somebody something, but the usher isn't
know
if
going to
I
let
him
in
without a
ticket.
So the old man explains
to
him
that
and death, so then the usher thinks it over and he says to the old man, 'All right, go ahead in, but don't let me catch you praying.' {Pause. Frown. Stand and begin emptying ashtrays.) Ach, I don't think I told it right. Morris, you tell it." Sooner or later, to go to a fine university or to accept an attractive position with an out-of-town firm, one of your children may ask to leave the home. As soon as possible after the child has moved into his new quarters, pay him a visit and do the following: it's
a matter of
(1)
city
and (2)
life
Bring food. is
He
starving. Tell
does not
him how
Take everything
them with
know where
thin
he
off his shelves
to
buy any
in a strange
looks.
and out of
his
drawers and line
oilcloth.
(3)
Wash
(4)
Rearrange
his floor. his furniture
and buy
plastic slip covers for every-
thing. (5)
Go
out and get him a
of gloves, a hat and
(if
warm
sweater, a pair of galoshes, a pair
the temperature there ever
falls
below 50 degrees)
earmuffs.
he has plastic dinner plates, say he needs something more substantial and buy him china ones. If he has china ones, say he needs something more functional and buy him plastic ones. (6)
If
home, you may call up his professor or his employer, introduce yourself, tell him how tired your son looked when you saw him and suggest that he not be made to work so hard. There are only two things a Jewish mother needs to know about sex and marriage: After you have returned
(1)
Who
is
having sex?
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
436 (2)
Why
Since to
aren't they married?
it is b>"
now apparent
have some kind of sex,
everyone gets married.
it
will
that everyone in the world
therefore be your dut\' to
And w hat more
is
determined
make
logical place to start
sure that
than in your
own home? It is
never too early to begin preparing your son for marriage. At
him an appreciation for the help him to win the hand of a capable
the age of eight or nine, start to develop in
good grooming habits which
will
young woman in marriage: what girl in her right mind would ever "Feb! Look at your ears marr\- a boy that has wax in his ears?" Develop his poise in a similar manner: "Stand up straight and don't slouch what girl m her right mind is going to marry a hunchback? By age 12 or 13 the child is ready for his first social encounter with the opposite sex. Arrange a party for young people at your home. If he appears hesitant to meet the young ladies, steer him o\er to several of them and urge him, under your breath, or in audible whispers from a few paces off, to introduce himself. If he remains reticent, smooth the way over those first few embarrassing moments by introducing him
—
—
yourself:
"This
is
my
who
son Marvin
stands like a hunchback."
By the time your son gets into high school, he will be going out on regular dates and will very likely insist on selecting the girls himself from
among
his classmates.
thing about these
Do
not discourage
girls for his
own
protection.
(1)
"This
(2)
"What's the famih's name?"
(3)
"What was
girl,
this,
but
tr>-
to find out
some-
Ask him:
she's Jewish?"
it
before?
By now your son is in college and dating quite seriously. If he is no longer living at home, your task will admittedly be more difficult, but by no means impossible. You will still arrange to spend \acations together, and you will still have the telephone and the U.S. Mails at your disposal. Your son will probabh ha\e a >oung ladyfriend whom he particularly
admires. As before, be sure of her background, but
tioning should be (1) (2)
(3) (4) (5)
"This
on
girl,
a
more
now
the ques-
sophisticated le\el:
she's Jewish?"
"She gets good marks in school?" "She smokes cigarettes in moderation?" "She drinks liquor in moderation?" "What kind of a girl smokes cigarettes and drinks liquor?"
Dan Greenburg Invite your son's girlfriend to your a
chance
to
determine whether she
is
437
home
for
dinner so you
will
have
good daughter-in-law material. To
permit a completely objective evaluation, never speak to the young lady
but use your son as an intermediary:
directly,
"Does she like mashed potatoes?" This form of address is known as The Third Person Invisible. Should your son ever decide to marry the girl, this device adapts very nicely to Basic Daughter-in-law Technique, otherwise known as the IForget-Her-Name Gambit: "Is what's-her-name is your wife coming over also?" If, by the time your son is out of college, he is still not married and he is not, God forbid, a homosexual, you must begin to Take Steps. Speak to friends of yours who have daughters his age or maybe a few years older or a few years younger, and try to get the young people together. Pass the word around that your son, though a talented, intelligent young man, is unable to find a girl who will go out with him. Have your friends ask him regularly why a nice boy like that is not
—
married.
Also speak of the matter to your son. Perhaps the idea of marriage
Remind him. Often. to show that you aren't
has merely slipped his mind. Joke about
it
in public
taking the matter too
seriously:
"Excuse me, mister."
"You
talking to
"This
is
my
me, lady?" son, Marvin."
"So?" "Twenty-five years old.
A
careful driver. Tell
me
A
master's degree in
Romance
languages.
something confidentially."
"Yeah."
"Would any young lady give her young man like that for a husband?"
right
arm
have a wonderful
to
"Search me, lady." "Yes or no?" "I
suppose yes."
"Marvin, did you hear? Listen what the
man
is
Suddenly, one day your son brings a strange
and introduces her
You
as his fiancee.
telling
girl
you."
over to the house
What do you do?
say hello to her, ask her
what the weather
moment, button on the
is
getting to be like
outside, excuse yourself for a
lead your son off to a corner of
the room, begin to sew a
sleeve of the coat he
and say
to
him
as follows:
is
wearing,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
438
You
"Marvin.
intend to marry this
girl?"
"Yeah. Not so loud, Ma." "She's very pretty, Marvin." it's
"Maybe even
a little too pretty,
know what
hardly
you know what
I
mean?"
"
"Ma, look "I
"
not very polite to
"Yeah. Look,
to
tell
you. {Pause. Finish sewing the button,
begin to bite off the thread, stop, study the end of it and look up into his
Look, you're
face.)
still
so young.
big hurr\' to get married
all
You have now done is
mean? What's your
I
of a sudden?"
all
you can be expected
do
to
for
your son.
It
time to give some thought to your daughter.
You
you
are fortunate in that
will
be able to meet and personally
young men who come to the house to take her away. Greet each young man at the door. Appraise him closely from head foot. Ask him the following:
evaluate
to
You know what
all
the
(1)
"You're Jewish?"
(2)
"What's your family's name?"
(3)
If
"What was it before?" the young man is driving
add these important
a car, be sure to
queries: (1) (2)
"You know how to drive?" "You have a driver's license?"
"How
do you drive?" (4) "Your father knows you're out?" Even if the young man has answered (3)
manner,
factor\'
"Ach, You'll
fast
I
it is
in
And
it, I
some
frowning.) All right, time.
all
whisper loudly in her
good
tell
you.
You
ditch tonight, right
—
youngsters
all
go, drive careful,
the
all
satis-
sigh:
drive like maniacs.
mark my words.
{Pause. Smile,
and have a wonderful
I'm going to worry myself sick about you,
As they are about "Stay
your questions in a
not a bad idea to frown, avert your head and
don't like
wind up
all
to go out the door, turn to
I
promise you."
your daughter and
ear:
way on the
right side of the seat,
if
you know what's
for you."
your daughter should not be married by the time she is out of college, apply the same tactics to her as to your son, with these subtle If
variations:
Seek out any young man at a part>' or other social gathering and begin to sell him on your daughter. Speak of her excellent disposition. Point out her
many
physical attributes:
Dan Greenburg "A face
like a
Vermeer
439
— you know Vermeer?"
"Yes, the painter."
"And
teeth? Did
you see how
— a matter of
"Well, as
"Three thousand
dollars
I
straight her teeth are?"
spent having her teeth straightened
four years at the orthodontist's so her
"Look,
"A
I
really
beautiful
a tiny bit
heavy
have to
girl.
— be
mouth could
Beautiful. (Pause.)
in the bust. (Smile.)
It
The
close."
only thing, she
is
maybe
runs in the family."
Calling attention to a slight imperfection often lends just the right
note of credibility to your sales pitch. In any case, do not beat around
The young man
the bush.
him
to invite
will
appreciate your frankness. Be direct. Beg
your daughter out
"For a malted-milk shake,
I'll
pay for
it
myself."
Should the young man actually come to the house to take your daughter out, be sure to reassure him: "You're not making a mistake, believe me. She refuses forty dates "
a week.
How
do you behave when you discover your daughter necking in the living room? Wait until the young man has gone home, go into your daughter's room and say to her as follows: "Miriam." "Oh, hi, Ma." "Miriam, I saw. I saw what you were doing in there." "Oh." "Miriam, who taught you this?" "Oh, for God's sake. Ma. I'm a big girl now." "Miriam, we are decent people. We have always tried to teach you the right thing. How could you do this to us?" "Ma, for God's sake, I was only kissing "Do you know what your father will do when I'll tell him? Do you?"
—
"No, but—"
"He
will
have a heart attack,
"Look, Ma, you don't have to
"Not only knew."
that, just think
—what he
that's tell
will do.
I
promise you."
what the neighbors would say
if
they
"Look—" had your teeth straightened? For this I bought you contact lenses? For this I paid good money to have them teach you to speak French?" "For
this
"Ma—"
I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
440
know what
do with you. [Pause.) a streetwalker. (Pause.) If you have any consideration all, you'll do the only decent thing." "Ac/i,
I
don't
to
My own daughter, for
your parents
at
"What's that?" "You'll leave this house virgin."
and
you'll
not
come back
until you're a
Cyra McFadden HIP
WEDDING ON MOUNT TAM EXCERPT FROM
The
Serial
As she got ready for Martha's wedding, Kate reflected happily that one great thing about living in Marin was that your friends were always growing and changing. She couldn't remember, for example, how many times Martha had been married before.
She wondered if she ought to call her friend Carol and ask what to wear. Martha had said "dress down," but that could mean anything from Marie Antoinette milkmaid from The Electric Poppy to bias-cut denims from Moody Blues. Kate didn't have any bias-cut denims, because she'd been waiting to see how long they'd stay in, but she could borrow her adolescent daughter's. They wore the same clothes all the time.
Her husband, Harvey, was already in the shower, so Kate decided on her Renaissance Faire costume. She always felt mildly ridiculous in it,
but
Tam go to
it
wasn't so bad without the conical hat and
it
was
definitely
Mount
Now the problem was Harvey, who absolutely refused to Mount Tam weddings in the French jeans Kate had bought him
wedding.
She knew he'd wear his Pierre Cardin suit, which was fine two years ago but which was now establishment; and when he came out of the shower, her fears were confirmed. Since they were already late, though, there was no point in trying to do something about Harvey. They drove up Panoramic to the mountain meadow trying to remember what Martha's bridegroom's name was this time (Harvey thought it was Bill again, but Kate was reasonably sure it wasn't) and made it to the ceremony just as the recorder player, a barechested young man perched faunlike on a rock above the assembled guests, began to improvise variations on the latest Pink Floyd. Right away, Kate spotted Carol and knew her Renaissance dress for his birthday.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
442
was
right
all
— marginal,
but
all right.
Carol was wearing Marie Antoi-
nette milkmaid, but with her usual infallible chic,
had embellished
it
with her trademark jewelry: an authentic squash-blossom necklace, three free-form rings bought from a creative artisan at the Mill Valley Art Festival
on her
right
hand, and her old high school charm bracelet
updated with the addition of a tiny silver coke spoon. Reverend Spike Thurston, minister of the Radical
Church
in
Unitarian
Terra Linda and active in the Marin Sexual Freedom League,
was presiding. Kate was thrilled as the ceremony began and Thurston raised a solemn, liturgical hand; she really got off on weddings. "Fellow beings," Thurston began, smiling, "I'm not here today as a
member
minister but as a
of the community. Not just the
souls gathered here, not just the
human community which
is
community of Mill
community of
Valley, but the larger
the cosmos.
"I'm not going to solemnize this marriage in the usual sense of the
word. I'm not going to pronounce
it
as existing
from
this
day forward.
— —
Because nobody can do that except Martha and" he held a quick, "and Bill." worried conference with somebody behind him Harvey was already restless. "Do we have to go to a reception after
he asked too loudly.
this thing?"
"Organic," Kate whispered, digging her fingernails into his
wrist.
"AtDavood's."
Harvey looked dismayed. "These children have decided to recite their own vows," Thurston continued. Kate thought "children" was overdoing it a little; Martha was at least fort\% although everybody knew chronological age didn't matter these days. "They're not going to recite something after me, because this the wedding of two separatenesses, two solitarinesses, is a real wedding
—
under the sky." Thurston pointed out the sky and paused while a jet thundered across it. Kate thought he looked incredibly handsome with his head thrown back and his purple Marvin Gaye T-shirt emblazoned with "Let's
Get
It
On"
stretched tightly across his chest.
"Martha," he
said, "will
you
tell
Standing on tiptoe, Kate could slightly to the right
moved with tha.
She
his
us what's in your heart?" just
catch a glimpse of the bride;
of her, she spotted Martha's ex-husband-once-re-
new old lady, who, Kate thought, looked like Marremember which of Martha's children, all present and
spacy
tried to
looking oddly androgynous in velvet Lord Fauntleroy
Martha
recited a passage
suits,
were
also his.
on marriage "from the Spanish poet Fe-
derico Garcia Lorca." Last time she was married, she'd said "Frederico."
Cyra McFadden
Kate thought the fact that Martha had got sign;
443 it
right this time
was
a
good
and she adored the Lorca.
When
he was almost inaudible, but Kate thought she recognized The Prophet, which was not a good sign. She dug her fingernails into Harvey again; he was shifting his feet restlessly. This wasn't a sign of anything, necessarily, since Harvey simply couldn't get used to his
"Hey,
recited in turn,
Bill
new
Roots, but
listen,"
it
was best to be
safe.
she whispered to Carol,
through the crowd and was now
at
her
that does mini-parks.
She met him
at
wiggled her way
side. "It's terrific, isn't it?"
"He
"Really," Carol whispered back.
who had
looks good. He's an architect
her creative divorce group."
Kate leaned across her to take in the crowd. She thought she recognized
Mimi
Farina.
She
also noticed Larry, her
shampoo person from
Rape of the Locks, who always ran her through the soul handshake when she came in for a cut and blow-dry. She hoped she wouldn't have to shake hands with Larry
at
the reception, since she never got the scissors/
paper/rock maneuvers of the soul handshake just right and since she was pretty sure that Larry kept changing
it
on
her, probably out of repressed
racial animosity.
Thurston, after a few remarks about the ecology, had
just pro-
nounced Martha and her new husband man and woman. Kate felt warmly sentimental as the bride and bridegroom kissed passionately, and loosened her grip on Harvey's wrist. She noticed that the fog was beginning to lift slightly and gazed off into the distance. "Hey, look," she said to Harvey excitedly.
"Isn't that
the ocean?"
"The Pacific," Harvey replied tersely. "Believed to be the largest on the West Coast. It's part of the cosmos." Kate felt put down. Harvey was becoming increasingly uptight these days, and remarks like this one were more frequent. Look at the way he'd baited her TA instructor at the Brennans' the other night. "You are not O.K.," he had told him loudly, lurching slightly in his Roots. "I could give you a lot of reasons; but take my word for it you are not
—
O.K." Yes, Kate was going to have to do something about Harvey.
.
.
.
Alan Coren LONG AGO AND FAR AWAY
Much
talk
is
talked of the need for the Dunkirk spirit today.
suppose instead that we had had today's
Up
spirit at
to his waist in the filthy sea, oil lapping his
But
Dunkirk?
sodden webbing, bomb-
blasted flotsam bobbing about him, he sucked his teeth,
and shook
his
head. "I'm not bleeding going in that," he said, "I'm not bleeding going
home
in
no rowing boat."
"Right," said his mate.
"Eighteen blokes in
it
already," he said. "Conditions like that,
"
they're not
fit
for a pig.
"Not fit for a pig, conditions like that," said his mate. "Got brought here in a troopship, din't we?" he said. He cupped his hands towards the rowing boat, and the man leaning towards them over its stern, arm outstretched. "Got brought here in a bleeding troopship!" he shouted. "Ten square feet of space per man!" "Regulations," said his mate, nodding. "All laid down. Nothing about going back in no bloody rowing-boat. Get away with murder if you let
'em,
A dive,
some people." Stuka shrieked suddenly overhead, levelled, veered up out of
back into the flakky
sky.
Its
bomb
its
exploded, drenching the two
men. "Not even got a roof on," he said. "What happens if it starts coming down cats and dogs halfway across? You could catch pneumonia." "Get
"And
a chill
on the
liver," said his
there's seasickness.
It's
mate.
not as
if
I'm a
sailor.
I'm not saying
it
Alan Coren
am
isn't all right for sailors,
mean,
their line,
it's
on as, that's what got took on as a sailor. I
right for
I? All
know what
got took
I
them, open bloody boat.
mean? But I'm
am.
I
445
If I'd
wanted
I
gunner. That's what
a
to be a sailor, I'd
have
"
"I'm a cook," said his mate. "Cook, the recruiting.
I
I
said
didn't say bleeding admiral.
cook on account of I'm interested
I
when
they asked
me up
want
to be a
didn't say,
up
in the standing
I
to
me
waist in
water, did I?"
"Course you
didn't."
An Me 109 came low
machine-gun bullet took his hat away. "You'd have got more as an admiral, too," he pensation, working in filthy conditions.
Nothing about
benefits.
all this
I
"I
the
last
A
sea.
"You get comreckon they owe us special
in basic training,
said.
was there? Prone shoot-
ing and a bit of the old bayonet, dry conditions, two
"When was
scummy
over the surface, strafing the
bob
a day,
all
meals."
time you had a square meal?" asked his mate.
never thought of that!"
He
took a notepad from his saturated
battle-blouse, licked his pencil, scribbled. "I never thought of that at
all.
Three days ago, as a matter of fact. Bleeding Cambrai, if you can call two spoons of warm bully a square meal." "For god's sake get a move on!" cried the man in the stern. The two privates waded awkwardly forward. "Not so bloody fast, mate," said the first. "I require a few moments with the brothers here."
The
eighteen stared at
their eyes, their
him over the gunwales. Red
bandages were thick with
leaving their hair to whiten with the "It
has been brought to
my
oil,
fatigue
their helmets
rimmed
were gone,
salt.
attention by Brother Wisley here,"
he
we are being expected to work in conditions unfit for a pig. Not only are we not being allowed to pursue our chosen trade, we have been dumped here in what can only be described as the sea, we have been required to leave our tools behind on the beach, we have not had said, "that
meal for three days, and as for the statutory tea-break, remember when. I won't even go into the overtime question."
I
can't
said his mate.
"But
a square
"We
won't even go into the overtime question,
may I draw
Own
the meeting's attention to the fact that
"
members
Yorkshire Light Infantry can be seen on our
left
of the Kings
climbing into a
cabin cruiser?"
The
eighteen turned, and looked.
"Bloody
hell," said a corporal.
"Well might you say bloody
hell, brother!" said
the
first
private.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
446
"Course, I'm not saying our brothers in the koyli are not entitled to
what they can get, and good luck, but the anomaly of the heretofore mentioned situation currently under review before the meeting by which we of the Royal Artiller>' ..."
"And the Catering Corps." and the Catering Corps, Brother Wisley, thank you, by which we of the Royal Artillery and the Catering Corps do not enjoy parity is one which threatens all we hold most dear." "Right!" cried the man in the stern. "Get in, or shut up, we haven't got all damned day, Jerri's throwing ..." ".
.
.
The
private held
up
his
hand.
he said, "just a minute. After frank and free discussions with my ad hoc executive here, we regret to inform you that deadlock has been reached in the negotiations, and unless you are prepared to furnish us with such basic requirements ..." "Just a minute, squire,"
"I'm getting out anyway, brother," said the corporal. self
over the
side.
"Come
on, you
lot,
I
"Well
said, brother!" cried
eased him-
have no intention of allowing
brothers on the floor to be manipulated by a cynical
subjected to actual distress to serve the
He
whim
my
management and
of the bosses."
the private.
The eighteen slid into the icy water. The rowing boat came about, and queue. But a bomb, exploding between time to wade up to the head of the
line,
sploshed off towards another
and them, gave the private and the man on crutches leading it
it.
"I
"but
let
know
these are difficult times, brothers,"
announced the
private,
us not use that as an excuse to allow ourselves to be led like
lambs to the slaughter. Solidarity
The
line hesitated.
"We
could be,
er,
is
our watchword, brothers."
needed back home,"
said the
man
at the front,
"couldn't we?"
The
private stared at
"Oh, got
him
a troublemaker,
bitterly.
have we?" he said loudly.
"It's
amazing,
there's always one, isn't there?"
"Always bloody one," said a voice down the
"Thank you, brother." He poked a "You'll get that crutch across your bonce
line.
finger into the leader's chest. in a
minute, son," he
said.
He
spread his hands to take in the gradually assembling crowd of waterlogged soldiers. "Got a
Got one of your put about by the
man
here believes
thinkers! Doesn't
gumment
know
to screw the
all
he reads
all this
in the
newspapers!
scaremongering
working man, doesn't
is
just
realise
Alan Coren that your real situation
is
all
447
very nice, thank you, doesn't ..."
came howling
The
from the dunes, their tracer slicing a red swath through the crowd, drowning his doesn't appreciate that gumment propaganda is being cunwords. ". ningly directed to militate public opinion on the side of nationalistic interests contrary to the welfare of the entire work force, does he?" private broke off as a couple of Heinkels
.
in
.
on it," said a fusilier who had been standing next to a man dismembered in the last strafe. "Oh, yes, and I don't think!" snorted the private. "You won't catch me out with no snap show of hands, brother, contrary to the democratic "I
we ought
think
secret ballot as
we know
The men all
it.
I
should cocoa!"
The private had articulated it men who had brought the little boats
shifted their feet uneasily.
so clearly, and, after
were, for the most part,
Nor
to vote
all,
men
the
of a class they had long learned to mistrust.
did they wish to betray their mates, with
through no small adversity; and
such fraught moments
it
whom
they had
come
was
at just
could not be denied that
as this that
it
advantage could be taken of them,
with their defences down, and the odds in favour of those
who sought
to
control them.
were things so bad that they should forget all else but short-term salvation? They were not yet dead, were they, which was rather more relevant than the emotionally-loaded evidence that others
And,
after
all,
could be seen to be dying. They had, had they not, stuck
beach up
until then,
why should
they not continue to stick
it
out on the
it
out now?
Slowly, but with what certainly appeared to be determination, the entire waiting
army turned, and began
to
wade back towards the
littered
dunes, and the devil they knew.
in
to
There were, of course, one or two who glanced over their shoulders the direction of England; but, naturally, it was too far away for them be able to discern anything, even had the darkness not, by then, been
falling.
Marshall Brickman THE ANALYTIC NAPKIN
Recent work by Frimkin and Eliscu has brought to Hght valuable new material about the origin and development of the analytic napkin. It is not generally realized outside of psychoanalytic circles that the place-
ment by the
analyst of a small square of absorbent paper at the head of
the analysand's chair or couch at the start of each session
whose
origins are rooted in the very beginnings of analysis,
is
a ritual
even predat-
ing the discovery of infant sexuality. Indeed, references to a "sticky prob-
lem" {"eines Entfiihrung bezitsung') appear as early the young Freud wrote to his mentor Breuer:
I
am
as 1886, in a letter
convinced that "hysterical symptoms," so-called, are nothing
but the emergence of long-buried psycho-neurotic conflicts [bezitsunger Entfiihrung].
Does
that
sound crazy? More important, how can
I
keep the
back of the patient's chair from becoming so soiled [ganz geschmutzig]?
They come
in,
they put their heads back
— one week and already my up-
holstery has a spot the size of a Sacher Torte.
With warm
regards,
Freud
Breuer's reply
is
not known, of course, because of the curious man-
ner in which he conducted his correspondence. (Breuer was unreasonably afraid that samples of his handwriting
"many powerful enemies"; carefully draft a reply, take
him, and then tear
it
therefore, it
might
upon
fall
He
hands of his
receiving a letter, he would
to the addressee's
to shreds.
into the
claimed that
home, read this
it
aloud to
behavior saved him
a fortune in postage, although Mrs. Breuer opined that her husband's
Marshall Bricknian
449
head was lined with "wall-to-wall kugel.") Breuer's only public statement on the napkin question was made during a demonstration of hypnosis, when he remarked that "a patient in a trance can be induced to stand on his feet for an entire treatment and never know the difference." It is
perhaps ironic
—
or, as
Ernest Jones put
problem should have emerged
that the napkin
it,
at a
"not ironic at
time
when
all"
the anti-
macassar was attaining universal acceptance by the East European intelligentsia. Freud, however, abhorred simplistic solutions, and sought
more profound answers.
Failing to find these, he sought
more compli-
cated questions. In any event, he rejected the use of antimacassars as "Victorian, confining, and repressive Besides, they are too
— everything
I
am
fighting against.
bumpy." The extent of the problem, however, can
be inferred from a perusal of Freud's professional expenses incurred for April, 1886, his
first
month
of private practice:
Waiting Room 3
coat hooks
2 chairs 1
@
5
kreuzer
1
@ 20 gulden
40
ashtray
16 issues Viennese Life magazine, 1861-77 period 1
framed Turner reproduction, "Cows
Consulting Room 3 doz. medium-hard
in a Field"
& diplomas,
framing and mounting
"Complete Works of Goethe"
(18 vols.)
"Works of Nietzsche" (abridged, 20 vols.) "Simple Card Tricks You Can Do" (pocket 1
fl.
8
kr.
2
fl.,
16
8
kr.
fl.
18 kr.
pencils
9 writing tablets, unlined, in "easy-eye green" Certificates
5 kr.
clock
Dry-cleaning and spotting upholstery
edition)
2
fl.,
7
fl.
40
fl.
34
fl.
20
kr.
8
fl.
240
fl.
14 kr.
Freud wrote to Koller, "every neurasthenic I treat this year should set me back in the neighborhood of four hundred gulden. Pretty soon, Vll be needing some treatment, eh? Ha, ha." On the advice of Charcot, Freud had his housekeeper apply a solution of nux vomica and lye to his consulting chair after each session a remedy that was hastily abandoned when a patient, Theo F., brought a legal "At
this rate,"
—
complaint of massive hair
loss directly traceable to consultations
the young neurologist. Freud
managed
with a sampler of marzipan and a
Vienna had been shaken.
to mollify the unfortunate
warm
with
man
fur hat, but his reputation in
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
450
The
early practitioners of psychoanalysis devised artful stopgap solutions
problem of the napkin. For a time, Jung met his patients at a furniture store, where, under the pretext of inspecting a couch, he would conduct an analytic session. After fifty minutes, patient and doctor would depart, Jung explaining to the salesman that they wanted to "shop around a little more." By contrast, Ferenczi required his patients to lie face down on the consulting couch a procedure that eliminated all stains but a small nose smudge. However, the patients' constant mumblings into the upholstery caused Ferenczi to become enraged, and he finally abandoned this technique. Klein, claiming that he was only trying to "lighten up" what was "an already dreary enough business," asked his patients to wear cone-shaped party hats during their session hours. The real reason, of course, was to protect Klein's couch, a flamboyant chesterfield covered in pale-lemon bombazine. Freud launched his own systematic research program by scouring Vienna for fabric samples, which he placed on the upper portion of his couch, a different sample being assigned to each patient. One case, that of a man who was analyzed on a folded barbecue apron, became the subject of an extended monograph of Freud's on hallucinations and hysteria. The apron had been presented to Freud by Charcot, and bore the legend "Konig von die Kiiche" ("King of the Kitchen"). An apparently severe olfactory hallucination (old cabbage) reported by the patient during his analysis eventually proved to have its source in the apron, and Freud was forced to withdraw his paper. To conceal his disappointment, he invited the man to a coffeehouse, but at the last moment changed his mind and instead sent Adler to meet him. Unfortunately, Adler became distracted in the process of flattening kreuzer on the trolley tracks and arrived a day late. (This episode was often referred to sarcastically by Freud, and provided the basis for the later break between him and to the
—
Adler.)
In a series of unattended lectures (May, 1906), Freud crystallized
the need for a resolution of the "sofa problem," as he termed
it.
"Some-
thing small and protective, yet flexible," he wrote in his notes, "ought to
be placed beneath (or possibly wrapped around) the patient's head. Perhaps a small rug or some sort of cloth."
It
was several decades before the
notion of a napkin would surface, but during a
summer
visit to
Man-
which Freud presented his half-sister with a bookend, he purchased a bolt of Japanese silk, which he sent to Vienna and caused to be cut up into small squares. The new material seemed to be working admirably, until an unexpected occurrence shattered his chester, England, during
illusions.
From
his
notebook:
\
Marshall Brickman
October
8.
Especially crisp
fall
451
day. Treating Otto P., a petty official
of the Bureau of Wursts. Classic psycho-neurosis: inability either to go to sleep
remain awake.
or
recounhng
while
Patient,
dream,
significant
thrashed about on the couch. Because of the extremely cool climate, extensive static electricity caused the
he rose
to leave at the
silk to
end of the
session. Analytic propriety, plus the
delicacy of the transference, prevented
and
I
when
cling to the patient's hair
me
from mentioning the situation
merely bade him good day.
Upon
reaching home, Otto
was mortified to
P.
find a square of
cloth adhering to the back of his head, and he publicly accused Freud of insensitiveness
and
willful japery.
An
anti-Semitic journalist claimed that
Freud had attempted to impose his own ethnic customs on a patient. The outcry raged for months, severely taxing Freud's energies, and only after it had abated could he enter in his journal, with wry insight: unless perhaps it is first dampened." "Clearly, silk is not the answer Freud's tentative moves in the direction of an all-purpose analytic napkin inspired others to ponder the matter. At the Weimar Congress,
—
Bleuler called for a standardization of napkin technique.
A
debate
lively
and materials finding ready champions. Abraham favored classical antimacassars, while Jung was partial to jute placemats, which he imported from a private source in Africa. The purist Holtz (it was he who in 1935 criticized Freud for not being Freudian enough) ridiculed the whole notion of a napkin and advocated ensued, with a variety of shapes,
"six
couches, to be changed
sizes,
daily, like
underwear." Liebner,
who
de-
tested Holtz, suggested that the material of the napkin vary with the
Freud then recalled that he had had no success in treating the celebrated "Wolf Man" until he tried a scrap of terry cloth, to which the patient developed a massive transference. In a culminating speech at Weimar, Freud outlined his vision of the ideal solution: "Hypatient's complaint;
gienic, disposable, inexpensive,
soever.
I
dream of
and without any
referential value what-
a totally affect-less napkin that every analyst
can
afford."
Freud's experimental early napkins (many of which are vate collections)
show
this drive
toward simplicity and
clarity
still
— swatches
of wool, gabardine, madras, burlap, and unbleached muslin, and, a
double layer of cheesecloth.
paper
week
when in
He was making notes on
the Anschluss forced
him
to leave for
in pri-
finally,
the use of blotting
London. Later that
Vienna, the Nazis publicly burned most of
his
napkin
file,
in-
cluding an irreplaceable sampler knitted by Lionel Walter, the Baron Rothschild.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
452
The enormous States
is
current popularity of psychoanalysis in the United
easily explained
by the napkin historian. American technologi-
know-how, plus the easy availability of materials, provided the answer Freud and his early disciples searched for but never found. In 1946, after extensive research at Mount Sinai Hospital, a team of pillow scientists at cal
the Kimberly-Clark paper
company
the analytic communities of Boston,
test-marketed a prototype napkin in
New
York, and Los Angeles.
It
was
a double-ply, semi-absorbent, bleached-wood-fibre product, with a forty-
per-cent rag content and an embossed edge.
The
response was over-
whelming, and the course of psychoanalysis was forever
Neimann Fek
said, expressing the gratitude
seventy years before the napkin.
No one
we
altered.
of his colleagues,
perfected the beard and the fee.
need ever be crazy again."
Now,
As Dr.
"It
took
finally,
Alexander Theroux MRS. PROBY GETS HERS EXCERPT FROM
Picric, antagonized, scuffing
confirmed a thing on
it.
Three Wogs
forward with a
leer,
Fu Manchu
common fear: a distorted mind proves that there is A girl in a diaphanous shift squirmed to bounce free
readily
someof the
ropes which held her, like a network of fistulae, to a scaled gold and
emerald
table, a simulated
unable to
between tery,
spit free.
The
inscrutability
dragon of smooth wood; a purple gag she was
yellow,
moonshaped
and simple
lust,
face of
Fu Manchu,
poised
both of which disputed for mas-
twitched in a decisive way and then his ochre fingernails, as
if
map, curved over her arm, onto her shoulder, up to her clavicle. Suddenly in the midst of depositing into the ashtray a slice of cellophane from her second pack of cigarettes, Mrs. Proby screamed. An plotting a
usherette
came running down
groups of people with the long
the aisle and ranged various shocked
beam
of her flashlight. Several annoyed
watchers, a few rows back, indicated with thumbs and umbrellas a quivering Mrs. Proby, her face the colour of kapok,
mumbling
hunched down
into her
and puffing smoke. The beam caught her. She jerked her head toward the light; again she screamed. Mrs. Proby
seat,
to herself,
up quickly, faced the dark audience, and, like a fat statue come alive and gone mad, she swung her arms high and sent out a highpitched, terrifying howl. Then she stamped up the aisle, demanded her ticket back, and flung out of the theatre. "Simples," said Mrs. Proby as she sat on the No. 22 bus which took her back to the Brompton Road roundabout, where she lived. It was her neighbourhood. stood
"Mrs. Cullinane, everyone has a neck," Mrs. Proby concluded firmly, digging into the purse of her red
handbag
for a saccharine tablet
and obviously piqued at her friend's ridiculous suggestion that the Chinese head sprouts, mutans mutandis, out of his shoulder blades.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
454
"even your Chinee."
which
was high
It
daily sweetens the
tea:
the perfervid ritual in England
ambiance of the discriminately
invited
and that
nothing short of barratry, a provoked shaft of lightning, the King's enemies, or an act of that
neck
could ever hope to bring to an end.
head between the ears of which
me
what made I
a
is
God
scream, say what you
don't just open
my mouth
at
"You wouldn't say boo
the
will,
first
is
dear,
"On
top of
a yellow face, and that's
and you
jolly well
know
drop of rain."
to a goose." Mrs. Cullinane
was trying to be
helpful.
"Not and
at
the pictures
her tea white.
stirred
wouldn't, would I?" Mrs. Proby asked archly
I
A
blocky, cuboidal head, faced in pinks and
whites and ruled in a fretwork of longitudes and latitudes which showed a
few orthographic traces of worry, surmounted a body that made Mrs.
Proby look
something
huge
like a
jar or,
like a prehistoric
dough showed occasional slag scraped
when shambling along
hue
she often did,
Nodosaurus. In a neck somewhat
fatty splotches,
back into a lumpish
russet, copperish
as
mound
like insipid
her hair sort of a heap of grey at the back.
Her eyes had
a
that recalled garden thistles or cold glints of steel,
much did, upon her moods. She was paradigmatic of gigantic women in London, all bum and elbow, who wear itchy
depending, as so those
fat,
tentlike coats, carry absurd bags of oranges,
beside you on the bus, smelling of shilling
and usually wheeze down perfume and cold air. She
wore "sensible" shoes, had one bad foot, smoked too much, and cultivated a look as if she were always about to say no. In all, she was a woman with the carriage and studied irascibility of a middle-aged prebendary in the
Church of England,
executrix of self-reliance, law-giver,
Diocletian reborn.
So much is, isn't it?" Mrs. Cullinane philosophized. "It was only last week I took me to the cinema. The daily told me they were running a Conrad Nagel thing with what's-hername, you know, the one I love, but let me tell you there was precious little Conrad Nagel that afternoon, Mrs. Proby." She brushed the shine on her skirt and struck a match for her friend's cigarette. "The picture I saw was about a garage mechanic and another git, excuse me, but git he was, in a plastic suit, who spent all their time taking drugs and forcing grammar-school youngsters to take baths with them. Now, really. I blame the Queen." "The Bishop." "The Queen." "The Bishop." This froggy voice seemed convinced.
"The cinema today
is
different.
Alexander Theroux
455
"Well," meekly offered Mrs. Cullinane in an inert and foam-sounding recovery, flustered but just
managed,
"it
could be the Queen.
her
It's
must be allowing all this rubbish into the country in the first place. George the Fifth, sick as he was, wouldn't have counted to seven before he sat down on the whole lot of them, looked up, and said, That, for Dicky Scrub!'
"
Mrs. Cullinane had the pinched comic face of Houdon's marble of
wide-mouthed
who
on an ounce of biscuits, the odd celery heart, and, as well, the persistent need to support and maintain ever fiscal sanity in Britain, a brave and full-time concern. She was the kind of woman who seemed to be always holding Voltaire, a sort of thin,
back a constant urge to
"When
statement,
suffragist
knit, the type
who believed that the Tough Get Going," was
of person
the Going Gets Tough, the
an utterance of the highest magnitude,
existed
its
speaker invariably the impre-
dreamland that alone could reshape the world and which surpassed, making quite superfluous, every single volume of philosophy, law, science, theology, literature, and general humanity through the long history of mankind, down to the last. She was a bottomless fund of those insane sermonizing anecdotes which explained, for instance, how sario of a
big-city
hoodlums and czars of the underworld, when
riddled by bullets
gasped only for their ice skates in the
final
minute;
there was a broken heart for every light in Piccadilly;
how
turtles
in the street,
never do tinkle in public; and
how
ladies
who worked
how
would
in the large sweet
which credenda, then, were often added precious and reverently delivered, if not memorable, didactic poems produced, she invariably felt, in the nick of time from the ragbag of tumbling skeltonics she kept at her easy disposal, like shewfactories actually hated, yes, hated sweets, to
bread
at a fair.
"We
never had any trouble, mind you, until America began to send
over shipfuls of dirty books and whole potloads of those smouldering
enormous b-e-d-s," Mrs. Cullinane spelled, "and girls in masks and open dust-coats down in Florida in the sunshine, winking at the plumber who came there just because and is supposedly fixing the dip-bulb in the w.c, but we know better, dear, and I wish we didn't, I wish we did not." Mrs. Cullinane paused, thinking nostalgically perhaps on those old, harmless sepia-tinted reels of "Movietone News" or the long lost three-handkerchief weepies. "Fancy someone like Elizabeth Two, once a princess, mind you, watching something like Erotic Nights in Dewsbury, Miss Rod Shrieks, The Woolwich Turk, or Motel Wives ofPigwiggen, never mind hearing about them. It makes one want films with toreadors,
to
go sick."
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
456 "It's
a dicey business, that.
It's
not enough in the street they're
and Bess. Pretty soon it'll be Libby," Mrs. Proby grunted. "Beth, please and thank you. Or maybe just Betty the calling her Lizzie, Liz, Betsy,
Mop." "I've
heard Tetty."
Exasperated, Mrs. Proby threw out an arm thick as a cutlet bat.
"No doubt, no Tetty.
It's
doubt. Mrs. Cullinane, no doubt you've heard
Eliza? Lisbeth? Elsie? Elsie, a
little
me this, for godsakes? Come
a very coarse word. But,
tell
haven't you also heard
on,
own up
to
it.
Show
bone."
"Well, Elspeth."
"You've never heard Elspeth." "Elspeth," Mrs. Cullinane assured her, "yes."
"A pipe dream, Mrs. Cullinane." "I'm certain of
Elspeth."
it.
"Never."
And Mrs. Proby cuits
—
glared at Mrs. Cullinane,
which were dipped,
who nipped some
bis-
self-consciously, in the tea, several times, again
in jerks.
Mrs. Proby quickly interrupted Mrs. Cullinane
humming "When
the Old
Dun Cow Caught
who had begun
Fire."
"I'm afraid to go out, Mrs. Cullinane. Even with
mean,
if
he should stop
to
go doo-doo by a
mask won't come
my
Weenie.
post, who's to guarantee
I
some
doorway and do me god-knows-what kind of brain damage, bash me with a cosh he might, snatch me handbag, even tamper about here and there in the you know." Mrs. Proby nodded knowingly and licked a bubble of tea off an upper lip whistle-split and slightly mystacial. big hairy thing in a
flashing out of a
"You're smarter than Mrs. Shoe." "Mrs. Shoe goes out?" "Frequently."
"Alone?" "This
is
my point."
"God." "That's what
I
said."
"My God." "That's just what
I
said."
down on the tray, walked to the and sat down again. She shrugged, shook
Mrs. Proby set her tea and saucer
door of the
living
room, shut
it,
her head slowly, and leaned forward. "Mrs. Cullinane, I'm not sure
know how
to say this to you,
you wouldn't
I
either." Biting the inside of
Alexander Theroux
457
her cheek, she threw a glance toward the aspidistra in her window and
"The reason I screamed, the reason you, even Prince Andrew himself would scream was this:
joined the tips of her fingers.
—
anybody
—
Yunnum Fun." Yunnum Fun?" Mrs.
I, I
thought of Mr. "Mr. full
Cullinane stopped her jaws, her
mouth
of scone.
"Mr.
nodded
Yunnum Fun
downstairs." Mrs. Proby's eyes narrowed. She
gravely, waiting for the shock of recognition.
It
came and was
gone. Mrs. Proby's eyes widened as a reinforcement. "Their necessarily our
how, nor
is
how
is
not
yours theirs."
"He's only a simple twit." "He's sneaky."
"He
just sells rice."
"He's got things on his mind."
"He's harmless, Mrs. Proby." "He's Chinese, Mrs. Cullinane."
The come an
small Chinese market and
its
proprietor, Mr.
Fun, hadn't be-
object of interest for Mrs. Proby until about five or six
months
when, at that time, a highly publicized altercation took place between the police and a body of cultural attaches at the Chinese Embassy. Not that, previous to this, harmony reigned between the English lady and the Chinese merchant; they had harassed each other for years (listening at doors, depositing curt notes, leaving footprints on each other's ago,
mail).
A
dot of a man, Mr.
Fun had owned
the grocery store and, in
closed circuit, had lived on-premise at the back of the bottom floor of
the building for eight years. Mrs. Proby, widowed and
of the no-longer-attached, occupied the
first
full
of the spurge
floor for three years, a pe-
had passed slowly without the companionable, if occawarlike, dialectic she had found in her husband. Mr. Proby
riod of time that sionally
faulted her only occasionally, never, certainly, by low dodges of the
on the odd Saturday night when, out on a toot, he would lurch home glassy-eyed under the streetlamps, with one or two middle-aged girls on each arm, singing ballistic snatches from "The Little Shirt My Mother Made for Me" or "Sweeney Todd the Barber," his behaviour, after all the drink, considered by the general neighbourhood not so much objectionable as courtly, though it periodically cost him those not always enviable few minutes just later when, unable to exorcise himself of the disconsolate and unbearable immediate, he fell prey to the singularly virulent malocchio drilling him in silence from across the darkened bedroom. But sovereignty was re-established as apologies were heart, but merely
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
458
upon, sworn, repeated, sworn again, and more than one potentially fistic evening passed away forever in a loud duet of snores,
made,
one
insisted
set
markedly louder, almost triumphant, poignantly female. What
the deuce, he had often said, say
la vee.
He was in plastics; then he woman and Weenie to Woodford full.
little
make
given Mrs. Proby a fairly
sometimes cranky, but almost always
judicious, non-adjectival,
full life:
He had
retired comfortably,
took the
little
Wells where they bought a modest
house, trimmed a hedge or two, and tried as best they could to the rough places plain. Then, three years ago, after a nice meal of
fresh crab cakes, Cornish pasties,
and
a bottle or
two of brown
Proby took a jaunt into Epping Forest and dropped dead
—
ale,
Mr.
ironically,
during the loveliest hour of the English year: seven o'clock on Midsum-
mer Eve. The sudden shock of disease called sprue, an agnail
it
all
on her
caused
in
Mrs. Proby a diarrheal
right toe as large as a
doorknob,
and, she claimed, twinges in the area of Rosenmiiller's Organ. In any case, Mrs. Fields,
Proby waked him, buried him
packed her things
in a spot
(a lovely collection
near the Bunhill
of Royal Doulton, her
woolwork slippers, a zipper Bible, a morocco-bound account of the Anglo-Nicaraguan wars of '46, a boa she had kept from the celebration of her wooden wedding, etc.), and moved to a little street near South Kensington, where she had grown up as a girl, because she could not stand to be too far from the nicer part of London, the very quarter in which oh, it seemed years ago, she often pointed out Bernard (Mr. Proby) courted her, with a full crop of bushy coal-black hair, pointed shoes, and the banjo eyes she'd grown to love. In those days, England had a voice in the world, people could understand the lyrics of songs, and there were no Chinese. Changes, however, had come about and had created in her a compulsion for the laudator temporis acti reminiscence, which excluded, perforce, the total existence of both a certain Chinaman and any capacity in him that might try to prove otherwise. Mrs. Proby
—
—
became hermetic not
A
tight national
per accidens but by predilection.
budget coupled with the small personal account
Mr. Proby left her kept Mrs. Proby's eye on the shilling. And except for a chance Saturday at Portobello Road (for thermal underwear, wholesale tins of quinine toothpowder, or general white elephant), a dash to a
museum
exhibit, or a quick afternoon at the pictures, she restricted
and firmitude of soul found in the English matron: a recipe available to few but the sore-footed and antique wise. Mrs. Proby bought her flat right out, dusted, put sachet lavender in the drawers, scrubbed, put up new flowered wallpaper, hoovered the rugs, religiously scrubbed lye into her porcelain, and draped the windows herself to the quiet deliberation
Alexander Theroux in percale.
Until she
munching from
met Mrs. Cullinane she spent most of her time
can of
a
459
Fortt's Original
Bath Olivers or sucking wine-
gums, slouched lugubriously by the wireless, following episode after episode of "The Archers," listening on the BBC to Sidney Torch's dated musical extravaganzae and of course she was, as she was always ready to add, "all for the telly," in front of which she often sat making penwipes
—
of flannel in the shape of carnations for the old soldiers on Royal Hospital
Road
in Chelsea.
Her
were grim; even Weenie was no help there.
teas
"How's your cup?" Mrs. Proby asked. "I'm doing nicely, thank you," answered Mrs. Cullinane, whose character was basically that of blotting paper: passive, receptive, and
ready for the strangest of Rorschachs, notwithstanding those patterns of peculiarity soaked will
up by the
thrust
and imposition of Mrs. Proby's iron
and irrevocable opinion. "These teacakes want jam," Mrs. Proby "Mine are fine." "You're having your teacake, then?"
"Oh
yes,
I
merely put
"I
noticed you did.
"I
had
I
it
said.
aside."
wondered why you
did."
a scone."
"But not a teacake." Mrs. Proby looked away. "I
thought
"Have
it
I'd
have
in a
minute."
now."
"Mrs. Cullinane "It
it
bit into
the cake trimly.
"It's
delicious."
wants jam."
Mrs. Proby, the recent terror of the unpropitiously topical film
fast
and irksome in her mind, suddenly bolted from the sofa, threw open the door of the living room, and, pointing to her pursed lips as a quick sign for secrecy and immediate silence, scuttled to the keyhole of the main entrance-hall door. She squatted, applied her ear, and peeped through, her right hand raised as a flat warning to a bewildered Mrs. Cullinane
who
followed her in
soft,
querulous hops, sucking a finger in
fright.
Glances were exchanged. Nothing. They mooned back into the room for a second cup. Mrs. Proby poured: "You're white."
mousemannered and votively appreciative, watched the sacrament and took her cup and saucer as the last word in the way of viaticum. "Lovely, and,
I
think, a twinkle of milk." Mrs. Cullinane,
"Spoons?"
"Two, dear." "Level or heaped?" "Heaped."
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
460
"Then one." "One?" One, Mrs. Proby mouthed, nodded once, conveying, as she
silently
pronoancing the word
as she
fully intended, the readily identifiable
world-weariness of Authority Taxed. Her eyes shut with a
snap.
little
Mrs. Cullinane's Lucullan urges were an embarrassment to herself.
such a hog and looked away absent-mindedly at a fuchsia marinescape of the pebble beaches at Rottingdean crookedly
She blushed
hung on
for being
a far wall.
mind
"I don't
telling
you," Mrs. Proby continued, smoothing her
round, lacteal figure, "he scares
me
right out of
my
naturals, and,
mind
some time now. He lights incense sticks at night, worships the devil, I think. I don't know if he's grinding tea or muttering A-rab chants, I don't, but I turn my wireless up so as not to hear, you see. What I'm driving at, Mrs. Cullinane, is this: some morning Mrs. Proby's going to turn back the covers, take off her hairnet, you, he's been acting strange for quite
and
find she's shoulder-to-shin with the
Yellow
Peril,
she
is."
"The Yellow Peril?" "You might have read about it, all those little cities near San Francisco, America, are up in arms over it, catching it as fast as nightingales and flopping down with writhe all over their mouths from it, poor things."
Mrs. Cullinane was heartbroken. "Honestly, with
and space have
trips there,
left their
"Oh,
it's
all
the
here
riots
then the whole African mess, you wonder
if
people
heads home." all
monkey-see, monkey-do,
isn't it?"
Mrs. Proby
said,
sipping her tea and swallowing in the middle of an important thought.
"Mmmm,"
she quickly recovered, "the point
to see who's there,
I
is,
when
I
look around
me
don't want to see yellows or browns or purples.
I
want mine."
A
wistful smile passed over Mrs. Cullinane's face
and she patted
Mrs. Proby's wrist with earnest compassion, adding with sincere force
between a prophetic stare and a wink, "You'll get yours. She closed her eyes and nodded confidently. The ladies understood each other, in the careful way that ladies do once they understand each other. They were rather a pair than a couple, supporting each other from day to day, rather a set of utile, if illmatched, bookends between which stood the opinion and idea in the metaphorical volumes that both connected them and kept them ever apart. Mrs. Proby and Mrs. Cullinane met each other as the result of a coincidence which proved their similarity, perhaps even to a perfection
and
a cross
"
Alexander Theroux or symmetry
we would never be
meeting took place
in the
461
ready to accord even to types.
The
lending library branch at Balls Green: both
—
had asked the librarian almost in unison for a copy oiThe Sinister Monk by Raoul Carrambo. Laughter, embarrassment, and that became for them the point of departure for a parallel life-style they had cherished for a long while now. But the relaladies, waiting at the "request desk,"
—
when, after a few off-hand discussions over tea and during walks, they began to realize they held common beliefs in politics, entertainment, and the public weal. Neither tionship was greatly strengthened in the two
could understand
why Mrs. Shoe,
Cullinane, Mrs. Proby often
felt
a third party (initially a friend of Mrs.
the need to
make
clear)
who worked
as
Evans in Oxford Street, was so unwilling to abhor the immigration problem. Voluntary Repatriation was the answer. One had to be purblind not to see that. a saleslady selling velveteen at D. H.
Mrs. Proby never could
come
to terms with the fact that Indians,
Chinese, or Blacks even bothered to get on boats and travel thousands and thousands of miles to England eating only peas and peppercorn or
—
playing mah-jongg or jacks in steerage with
known
should have
would be jumping
all
the chickens
— when they
would certainly come when people the ocean for want of room, run screaming
that the day
off into
off into the Highlands for a gulp of air, or begin selling their hair just to
keep
alive.
This was
why Mrs. Proby
door, saying, "Cor, good to see a
always met Mrs. Cullinane at the
human
face."
Then, there chanced to happen the fully reported melee at the Chinese Embassy, with blow-up photographs in the Daily Mail of hissing, spitting ambassadors armed with cricket bats, flatirons, and pinking shears, while the British police were left with only dust-bin covers to protect themselves. It was only a matter of time, as matters go, therefore, that Mrs. Proby began to notice many Chinese on the streets: hunched, shuffling,
ble
dry-mannered, and recondite
in that
carapax of the inaccessi-
and unproven. Mrs. Proby immediately bought
a screw
and lock
for
her door.
"So
I
got
all fired
up and
carried away," Mrs. Proby said, plucking
"when
a tea leaf off the tip of her tongue,
I
saw
this absolutely
perverse
Chinee with a hat like a black upside-down cup with a nipple on it and a moustache like two long pieces of dirty licorice hanging from his nose. I thought of Mr. Yunnum Fun, so help me dearie. And you would have done, too."
"Was
"Who
it
all
blood and gore?'
stayed for the end to watch,
should have, strange to say, then
I
me? Not
likely.
I
suppose
I
could have told you the whole give
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
462
and
take,
you see."
A
pause: Mrs. Cullinane pulled the lobe of her ear,
reflected.
Yunnum Fun
"Mr.
"He has white sounds to
me like
doesn't have a moustache."
hairs growing out of his ears, like artichokes.
It
you're defending him."
Mrs. Cullinane swerved her shoulders in nonchalance. "He walks
around
in slippers."
"He wears pajamas,
too."
"But he doesn't wear a Chinese hat."
"So you defend him." "I'm not defending him." sounds to
"It
me
like
you're defending him.
What
does
it
sound
like
to you?"
What
is
a pair,
it
seemed proven only once
again,
is
not
who
is
a
couple.
Mrs. Proby assumed the pain-of-the-unseen-wound expression,
on her knuckle. She mentally envisioned a piece of black cardboard from which she sharply cut a cruel profile of Yunnum Fun, thinking of his petty insults and bumptious insularity. She puffed out circles of smoke and let loose, between the blue swirls, a not-uncommon antagonism, syncopated with stood up, took a cigarette from her pack, and tapped
hot flashes: part
bigotr\-, part
it
haptic bias.
normal for the Chinese to come over here without so much as shoe flap, go on National Health, have babies for a song, buy spectacles for less than cost, get free teeth, and then just because everything's not all cozy and done up like a nice package from Father Christmas, frills and froo-froo and all, go out into the street and kick those handsome policemen in the kneecaps. And all the while our own have to make do with bits and pieces. Who wouldn't ha\e bad "I
suppose
dreams?
It
it's
perfectly
my hump, Mrs. Cullinane. It should raise my hump," Mrs. Cullinane apologized.
raises
"It raises
yours."
"When?" "Just
now, dear."
"You're
just saying that
because
it
raised
my hump,"
said
Mrs.
Proby, an avocadine hue rising into her ample neck. Mrs. Cullinane
turned cinnabar red. "I
mean,
let's
The
face
it,
colours clashed.
we should
take care of our
own
first,
shouldn't
we? Give us a few years and we'll have books thai you ha\'e to read backwards, and our children will have to write with nails manufactured in China and make those peculiar words with wings and splinters and god knows what, won't we?" asked Mrs. Proby, who, unbeknownst to
Alexander Theroux
463
had one of the grouts from the bottom of the teacup on the tip of her nose. "If you don't find that peculiar, Mrs. CuUinane, you're off your
her,
rails,
spade to spade." Mrs. Cullinane clucked, sipped the
last
of her tea, and placed the
cup on the saucer in her lap, dabbed her lips daintily with a napkin, and drew her finger down each side of her open mouth which she smacked as an indication that tea for her was now over. She placed the sacramentals on the server, stood up, adjusted the jacket of thin, blue-striped
her herringbone
suit.
"Lovely, dear. Just tickety-boo."
"Have yourself another teacake." "Godfrey," said Mrs. Cullinane, making a clown face. "I'm full up." "Tomorrow night, then, for the ham." Mrs. Cullinane, head inclined and little hands joined, was smiling vacantly at her little buttoned feet. She looked like Squirrel Nutkin. She might have been asleep. Then she looked up slowly, depositing her eyes into Mrs. Proby's and quickly bumping out of her reverie. She grew pursy, flutterful.
"Tomorrow
"Ham." Mrs. Proby
night, then, for the
sniffed.
"My ham
.
.?"
.
supper."
Mrs. Cullinane formed her hand into a
pistol
and aimed a finger
at
her temple; she crossed her eyes, lolled her tongue, and displayed, with jangling arms and a dizzy expression, her silly lapse of memory. Forget-
"Of course, dear," she burbled.
fulness for her was a merciful narcotic.
"Dumplings,
as well."
And
You
you remembered. I can't eat apples as they come from the tree; the crunch goes right through me. I have a thin windpipe. You see, the pips are murder "Lovely, dear.
and
so thoughtful.
see,
—
"I
don't core
my
apples," Mrs. Proby interrupted. "I won't have
Pips impart a delicious flavour to dumplings.
Cored apples not only made
mock
of Mrs. Proby
a
who never
mock fixed
I
thought you knew that."
of the natural apple, they
them
it.
that way.
"You want
made
a
to think
about your kitchen, Mrs. Cullinane." Mrs. Cullinane was thinking about her windpipe. Mrs. Proby was not given to "adventurous cooking." True, ten years ago, in a
mad
fit
of what then seemed an unquenchable obsession
with experiment, she did once pull her bread, for a cheese lunch. But cooking, especially in England, was not a question of miracles.
And even
she hated eyeing potatoes and making bechamel, she knew what work meant. One does not just throw a bun up in the air, as she often rather if
realistically
Good
pointed out, and expect
it
come down pig-in-the-blanket. And there was an end to it. All
to
English dishes, sweet and short!
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
464
the so-called snappy puddings, camel meat, weevily flour, cut-and-comeagain cheeses, expensive chocolates, and powdered soup-and-fish prep-
up with additives sunk into one's stomach like a bump in a trash bin and insured hardening of the arteries, for one thing, and squammes, for another. She loved a steaming joint, a bowl of fresh cocka-leekie soup, and especially liked her brussels sprouts hard, where they stood up and came green in a minute, after which, of course, a few spoonfuls of figgy pudding to top it all off. She was, after all, an islander. Islanders had to know what to eat, because any minute the Communists, those hoof-footed dongs from the primeval wastes who live only on smudgy black aerated bread and complaints, would be swimming around the whole nation with corking and nets in their mouths, sealing Great arations
shot
all
from the
and forcing everyone into a diet of cowpats, the lesser sage, and ounces of mastick. As if life were all clover! Islanders, also, knew about fish, and Mrs. Proby often found herself, in Britain off
rest of the world,
the midst of a somnambulistic
stroll in
the middle of the night, vora-
ciously gripping the door of the fridge with both hands, a volcanic lust in
her mind for a nice hake, turbot,
slice
brill,
some
whiting, or, best of
of John Dory, which had her favourite piece on the cheek.
then,
if
she was knocked
Bedfordshire
—
in,
to ease the
maybe
a nice little
rheumatics and
Pimm's Cup
start
—
all,
a
And
just before
her off again on her
beauty slumber. Beauty, she often reminded herself, was important as well.
You never knew. Curatical in her bugled wool, Mrs. Proby bore regally a large teapot
toward her small kitchen. Mrs. Cullinane champed down on a napkin to see a trace of lipstick, fixed her hair in a wall mirror, and fidgeted into
her fur-tipped seal boots. She turned toward the kitchen.
"May
I
pluck a
rose?"
Wringing her arms of water, Mrs. Proby came back into the room in the midst of a monologue which she had begun with her dog in the kitchen. ". featherbedded and all. If it was up to me, I'd throw out the .
.
whole ruddy lot. Sorry?" "I have to spend a penny." "The bottom of the hall. You know." She paused, coddling the stanchion of her left breast from heartburn. "The bathroom stationery is in the cabinet, with a rubber around it. The bugs were ruining the t.p. That's why you will smell pepper in the convenience, Mrs. Cullinane. Don't let it stop you from your business. I sprinkle pepper there, for the bugs." She snorted out with a cruel little chuckle. "They hate it." She indicated an unlighted passageway off the living room, through which Mrs. Cullinane poked, feeling the walls for surety. Mrs. Proby splayed
Alexander Theroux
465
herself in a chair, stretched her feet wide apart, and pinched lovingly the wattles of her dog, both staring into space.
The
sound of a Mrs. CuUinane re-
identifiable
loud gurgle and splash pulled her from her revery. entered smiling.
"You remember, of course, the
Museum, Mrs. wasn't
it?"
"Oh "I
fine figger for
yes," Mrs. Cullinane said dryly. "That
Chinaman."
thought you forgot." could
forget?"
I
thought you forgot."
"How "After
no point
could I
just
forget?"
I
reminded you, you couldn't, Mrs. Cullinane;
there's
in fibbing."
The about
A
Mrs. Proby sucked a tooth.
"How "I
Cullinane.
and Albert the children here and about,
la-de-da in the Victoria
reference here was to an unfortunate incident that took place
a fortnight before the confrontation at the
Chinese Embassy and
which prompted Mrs. Proby, despite Mrs. Cullinane's protestations that the man in question might have been Japanese, to write to Downing Street a singularly outraged letter, notable, perhaps, most of all for its insinuation that an insidious collaboration was taking place, known to few but the initiated and politically aware, between the British Civil Service and
Red China. "Watch the
feathers fly," Mrs. Proby prophesied.
Mrs. Proby and Mrs. Cullinane took advantage of the English year
Annual Spital Sermon, Oak-Apple Day, Swan Upping, the Shrove Tuesday Pancake Greaze, and the Presentation of the Knolly Rose. And Mrs. Proby and Mrs. Cullinane loved and
its
rosary of annual events: the
to go to
museums
as well.
They loved
tapestries, the century-old cos-
tumes, and delicate bone china. Mrs. Cullinane could never get over the intricacy of the Eye-talian designs which she herself could never hope to duplicate in a thousand million years, she said. Mrs. Proby said
it
took
was on Egg Saturday one lovely afternoon in spring and a fresh rain had left the streets clean and the air bright for a good walk to the Victoria and Albert. But no sooner had they passed the Jones Collection and were making their way through to the tapestries, her mind off herself.
It
with determined and mechanical clockwork steps, they happened to pass a chunky man (a Thai) huddled in a greasy overcoat, sitting on a small
bench
before
the
elongated,
sensual
Nymph." His hands were fumbling
sculpture
in his lap (a
called
"Reclining
rubbing friction to restore
nudged Mrs. Cullinane, dragged her away behind some eighteenth-century French busts in a corner, and, her back to the room, squinted past Mrs. Cullinane's
warmth). Mrs. Proby, biting her
lip
and
inquisitorial,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
466
shoulders while gesturing with her
over her own, in the direction
room guard and explained in euphemistically vague but excited terms that a Chinaman in that same room was drooling and manipulating himself, and, by way of footnote, of the man.
They
thumb
bustled o\er to the
they stood around and painted a few word-pictures which included various suppositions, not the least of
which was that
Mother's fa\"ourite room and that, horresco
Canterbury might be coming into the It
referens,
museum any
was the Queen the Archbishop of it
minute.
was getting dark outside. Mrs. Cullinane stopped
at
the door and
smiled sweetly. She squeezed Mrs. Proby's elbow and turned her head to
one
side in compassion.
landing, and spoke.
She
started
down
the
stairs,
turned on the
"Keep your pecker up, dear."
There came a pause. "Remember." "Yes'"
"When the going gets tough, the tough get going." The door slammed. Mrs. Proby relocked the door, popped
a valium
mouth, and washed the cups and saucers, having pulled on some long pink rubber gloves lined in yellow. She thought of Fu Manchu's fingernails. She paused, her hands quiet in the water, and looked behind her. Then she shambled into the livingroom and stretched herself out in a crumpled way on the sofa. The dog shifted. Mrs. Proby blinked in the dark room, unhapp\- and on edge for the yellow crosshatched illusions and patterns thrown on the ceiling by the passing autos tablet into her
outside.
Nora Ephron A
I
have
FEW WORDS ABOUT BREASTS
to begin with a
in the fifth
and
few words about androgyny. In grammar school,
sixth grades,
that supposedly determined
we were
all
tyrannized by a rigid set of rules
whether we were boys or
girls.
The
episode
Finn where Huck is disguised as a girl and gives himself away by the way he threads a needle and catches a ball that kind of thing. We learned that the way you sat, crossed your legs, held a cigathe way you did these things instinctively rette, and looked at your nails was absolute proof of your sex. Now obviously most children did not take this literally, but I did. I thought that just one slip, just one incorrect cross of my legs or flick of an imaginary cigarette ash would turn me from whatever I was into the other thing; that would be all it took, really. Even though I was outwardly a girl and had many of the trappings a girl's name, for example, and generally associated with girldom I spent the early years dresses, my own telephone, an autograph book in Huckleberry
—
—
—
of I
my
—
adolescence absolutely certain that
did not feel at
all like
a
girl.
I
I
might
was boyish.
at
was
I
any point
gum
it
up.
athletic, ambitious,
had scabs on my knees and my socks slid into my loafers and I could throw a football. I wanted desperately not to be that way, not to be a mixture of both things, but instead just one, a girl, a definite indisputable girl. As soft and as pink as outspoken, competitive, noisy, rambunctious.
a nursery.
And nothing would do •
that for •
me,
I
I felt,
but breasts.
•
months younger than everyone else in my class, and so for about six months after it began, for ^x months after my friends had begun to develop (that was the word we used, develop), I was not particularly worried. I would sit in the bathtub and look down at my breasts and know that any day now, any second now, they would start I
was about
six
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
468
They
want to buy a bra," I said to my mother one night. "What for?" she said. My mother was really hateful about bras, and by the time my third sister had gotten to the point where she was ready to want one, my mother had worked the whole business into a comedy routine. "Why not use a Band-Aid instead?" she would say. It was a source of great pride to my mother that she had never even had to wear a brassiere until she had her fourth child, and then only because her gynecologist made her. It was incomprehensible to me that anyone could ever be proud of something like that. It was the 1950s, for God's sake. Jane Russell. Cashmere sweaters. Couldn't my mother see that? "J am too old to wear an undershirt." Screaming. Weeping. Shouting. "Then don't wear an undershirt," said my mother. "But I want to growing
buy
like
everyone
"What
a bra."
else's.
for?"
suppose that for most
I
didn't. "I
girls, breasts, brassieres,
that entire thing,
more trauma, more to do with the coming of adolescence, with becoming a woman, than anything else. Certainly more than getting has
your period, although
that, too,
was traumatic, symbolic. But you could
see breasts; they were there; they were visible.
Whereas
a girl could claim
and nobody would ever know the difference. Which is exactly what I did. All you had to do was make a great fuss over having enough nickels for the Kotex machine and walk around clutching your stomach and moaning for three to five days a month about The Curse and you could convince anybody. There is a school of thought somewhere in the women's lib/ to
have her period
for
months before she
actually got
it
women's mag/ gynecology establishment that claims that menstrual cramps are purely psychological, and I lean toward it. Not that I didn't have them finally. Agonizing cramps, heating-pad cramps, go-down-tothe-school-nurse-and-lie-on-the-cot cramps. But, unlike any pain I had ever suffered, I adored the pain of cramps, welcomed it, wallowed in it, bragged about it. "I can't go. I have cramps." "I can't do that. I have cramps." And most of all, gigglingly, blushingly: "I can't swim. I have cramps." Nobody ever used the hard-core word. Menstruation. God, what an awful word. Never that. "I have cramps." The morning I first got my period, I went into my mother's bed-
room
to
tell
her.
burst into tears.
on
my
It
was
utterly-hateful-about-bras mother,
really a lovely
moment, and
I
remember
it
so
was one of the two times I ever saw my mother account (the other was when I was caught being a six-year-
clearly not just
cry
And my mother, my
because
it
old kleptomaniac), but also because the incident did not
mean
to
me
meant to her. Her little girl, her firstborn, had finally become a woman. That was what she was crying about. My reaction to the event,
what
it
Nora Ephron
however, was that
I
might well be a
woman
some scientific, textbook every month and stop wasting all
sense (and could at least stop faking those nickels). But in another sense
drogynous and
I
started with a 28
AA bra.
although
in those days,
—
as liable to tip over into •
I
469
•
in
in a visible sense
boyhood
gather that
I
was
as an-
as ever.
•
don't think they
I
—
made them any
now you can buy
smaller
bras for five-year-
olds that don't have any cups whatsoever in them; trainer bras they are called.
My
first
brassiere
came from Robinson's Department
Store in
went there alone, shaking, positive they would look me over and smile and tell me to come back next year. An actual fitter took me into the dressing room and stood over me while I took off my blouse and tried the first one on. The little puffs stood out on my chest. "Lean over," said the fitter. (To this day, I am not sure what fitters in bra departments do except to tell you to lean over.) I leaned over, with the fleeting hope that my breasts would miraculously fall out of my body and Beverly
Hills.
I
into the puffs. Nothing.
"Don't worry about
when
it,"
said
my
friend Libby
things had not improved. "You'll get
"What
them
some months
later,
after you're married."
you talking about?" I said. "When you get married," Libby explained, "your husband will touch your breasts and rub them and kiss them and they'll grow." That was the killer. Necking I could deal with. Intercourse I could deal with. But it had never crossed my mind that a man was going to touch my breasts, that breasts had something to do with all that, petting, my God, they never mentioned petting in my little sex manual about the fertilization of the ovum. I became dizzy. For I knew instantly as naive as I had been only a moment before that only part of what she was saying was true: the touching, rubbing, kissing part, not the growing part. And I knew that no one would ever want to marry me. I had no breasts. I would never have breasts. are
—
—
•
My best me
friend in school was
•
•
Diana Raskob. She
lived a block
from
The
Ras-
house
full
of wonders. English muffins, for instance.
kobs were the
first
people in Beverly Hills to have English muffins for
in a
They
and a badminton court, and a subscription to Seventeen magazine, and hundreds of games, like Sorry and Parcheesi and Treasure Hunt and Anagrams. Diana and I spent three or four afternoons a week in their den reading and playing and eating. Diana's mother's kitchen was full of the most colossal assortment of junk food I have ever been exposed to. My house breakfast.
also
had an apricot
tree in the back,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
470
was
of apples and peaches and milk and
full
cookies
— which were
nice,
and good
homemade
chocolate-chip
for you, but-not-right-before-din-
ner-or-you'll-spoil-your-appetite. Diana's
house had nothing
in
it
that
was good for you, and what's more, you could stuff it in right up until dinner and nobody cared. Bar-B-Q potato chips (they were the first in them, too), giant bottles of ginger ale, fresh popcorn with melted butter, hot fudge sauce on Baskin-Robbins jamoca ice cream, powdered-sugar
doughnuts from Van de Kamp's. Diana and I had been best friends since we were seven; we were about equally popular in school (which is to say, not particularly), we had about the same success with boys (extremely
and we looked much the same. Dark. Tall. Gangly. It is September, just before school begins. I am eleven years old, about to enter the seventh grade, and Diana and I have not seen each other all summer. I have been to camp and she has been somewhere like Banff with her parents. We are meeting, as we often do, on the street midway between our two houses, and we will walk back to Diana's and eat junk and talk about what has happened to each of us that summer. I am walking down Walden Drive in my jeans and my father's shirt hanging out and my old red loafers with the socks falling into them and coming toward me is ... I take a deep breath ... a young woman. Diana. Her hair is curled and she has a waist and hips and a bust and she is wearing a straight skirt, an article of clothing I have been repeatedly told I will be unable to wear until I have the hips to hold it up. My
intermittent),
jaw drops, and suddenly breath sobbing.
without
me
My
I
am
crying, crying hysterically, can't catch
best friend has betrayed me.
and done
it.
my
She has gone ahead
She has shaped up. •
•
•
Here are some things I did to help: Bought a Mark Eden Bust Developer. Slept on my back for four years. Splashed cold water on them every night because some French actress said in Life magazine that that was what she did for her perfect bustline.
Ultimately,
ded
bras.
school
I
I
I
resigned myself to a bad toss and began to wear pad-
think about
went around
them with
in
them now, think about them,
my
different-sized breasts.
all
those years in high
three padded bras, every single one of
Each time
I
changed the next me-
changed bras
I
one week nice perky but not too obtrusive breasts, dium-sized slightly pointy ones, the next week knockers, true knockers; all the time, whatever size I was, carrying around this rubberized appendage on my chest that occasionally crashed into a wall and was poked sizes:
Nora Ephron
471
— think about that and wonder face through how anyone kept My parents, who normally about needling me — why did they say nothing had no they watched my chest go up and down? My who would periodically of growth and reassure me — why inspect my breasts they inward and had to be poked outward
all
I
a straight
it.
restraints
as
friends,
for signs
at least
didn't
counsel consistency?
And
the bathing
suits.
I
die
when
I
think about the bathing
suits.
That was the era when you could lay an uninhabited bathing suit on the beach and someone would make a pass at it. I would put one on, an absurd swimsuit with its enormous bust built into it, the bones from the suit stabbing me in the rib cage and leaving little red welts on my body, and there I would be, my chest plunging straight downward absolutely vertically from my collarbone to the top of my suit and then suddenly, wham, out came all that padding and material and wiring absolutely horizontally. •
Buster Klepper was the
my my ish,
boyfriend
my
first
•
•
boy who ever touched them.
senior year of high school. There
is
He was
a picture of
him
in
high-school yearbook that makes him look quite attractive in a Jew-
horn-rimmed-glasses sort of way, but the picture does not show the
pimples, which were air-brushed out, or the dumbness. Well, that really fair.
He
wasn't
refused to accept
it,
dumb. He
just wasn't terribly bright.
"He was
came out
His mother
refused to accept the relentlessly average report
cards, refused to deal with her son's inevitable destiny in
college or other.
isn't
tested," she
would say
to
some
junior
me, apropos of noth-
hundred and forty-five. That's near-genius." Had the word "underachiever" been coined, she probably would have lobbed that one at me, too. Anyway, Buster was really very sweet which is, I know, damning with faint praise, but there it is. I was the editor of the front page of the high school newspaper and he was editor of the back page; we had to work together, side by side, in the print shop, and that was how it started. On our first date, we went to see April Love, starring Pat Boone. Then we started going together. Buster had a green coupe, a 1950 Ford with an engine he had hand-chromed until it shone, dazzled, reflected the image of anyone who looked into it, anyone usually being Buster polishing it or the gas-station attendants he constantly asked to check the oil in order for them to be overwhelmed by the sparkle on the valves. The car also had a boot stretched over the back seat for reasons I never understood; hanging from the rearview mirror, as was the custom, was a pair of angora dice. A previous girl friend named Solange, who was famous throughout Beverly Hills High School for having no pigment in ing,
"and
it
a
—
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
472
her right eyebrow, had knitted them for him. Buster and
would
I
ride
around town, the two of us seated to the left of the steering wheel. I would shift gears. It was nice. There was necking. Terrific necking. First in the car, overlooking Los Angeles from what is now the Trousdale Estates. Then on the bed of his parents' cabana at Ocean House. Incredibly wonderful, frustrating necking,
loved
I
but no further than necking, please don't,
really,
it,
please, because there
I
was absolutely
of going-a-step-further with a
terrified
of the general implications
near-dummy and
also terrified of his find-
ing out there was next to nothing there (which he knew, of course; he
wasn't that dumb). I
broke up with him
one
at
point.
we were apart for about drove down to see a friend at a I
think
two weeks. At the end of that time, I boarding school in Palos Verdes Estates and a disc jockey played "April Love" on the radio four times during the trip. I took it as a sign. I drove straight
back to Griffith Park to a golf tournament Buster was playing in
(he was the sixth-seeded teen-age golf player in southern California) and
presented myself back to him on the grefen of the i8th very dramatic. That night
we went
to a drive-in
hand under my protuberances and onto seem to mind at all. •
•
"Do you want "Yes" I said. I was nineteen big strange
marry
to
my
my
and
let
I
He
breasts.
him
was
all
get his
really didn't
•
son?" the
woman
asked me.
years old, a virgin, going with this
woman who was
liole. It
woman's son,
married to a Lutheran minister in
Hampshire and pretended she was gentile and had
this
New
this son, by her first
of a son who ran the hero-sandwich concession at Harvard Business School and whom for one moment one December in husband,
this total fool
New Hampshire I 1
wanted
said
—
as
much
out of politeness as anything else
— that
to marry.
"Fine," she said. "Now, heres what you do. Always
make
sure you re
on top of him so you wont seem so small. My bust is very large, you see, so I always lie on my back to make it look smaller, but you II have to be on top most of the time." I
nodded. "Thank you,"
"I
have a book
you
leave.
me.
It
Keep
for
it."
was a book on
"Thank you,"
you
I said.
to read," she
She went frigidity.
I said.
went on. "Take
to the bookshelf,
found
it it,
with you when
and gave
it
to
Nora Ephron
feel
473
That is a true story. Everything in this article I have to point out that that story in particular
is
a true story,
is
true. It
but
I
happened happened, I
on December 30, i960. I think about it often. When it first naturally assumed that the woman's son, my boyfriend, was responsible. I invented a scenario where he had had a little heart-to-heart with his mother and had confessed that his only objection to me was that my breasts were small; his mother then took it upon herself to help out. Now I think I was wrong about the incident. The mother was acting on her own, I think: that was her way of being cruel and competitive under the guise of being helpful and maternal. You have small breasts, she was saying; therefore you will never make him as happy as I have. Or you have small breasts; therefore you will doubtless have sexual problems. Or you have small breasts; therefore you are less woman than I am. She was, as it happens, only the first of what seems to me to be a neverending string of woijien breast size. "I
who have made competitive
would love
to
wear
a dress like that,"
remarks to
my
friend
me about
Emily says
my bust is too big." Like that. Why do women say these things to me? Do I attract these remarks the way other women attract married men or alcoholics or homosexuals? This summer, for example. I am at a party in East Hampton and I am introduced to a woman from to
me, "but
minor celebrity, very pretty and Southern and blond and outspoken, and I am flattered because she has read something I have written. We are talking animatedly, we have been talking no more than five minutes, when a man comes up to join us. "Look at the two of us," the woman says to the man, indicating me and her. "The two of us together couldn't fill an A cup." Why does she say that? It isn't even true, dammit, so why? Is she even more addled than I am on this subject? Does she honestly believe there is something wrong with her size breasts, which, it seems to me, now that I look hard at them, are just right? Do I
Washington. She
a
is
unconsciously bring out competitiveness in
women?
In that form?
What
do to deserve it? As for men. There were men who minded and let me know that they minded. There were men who did not mind. In any case, J always minded. And even now, now that I have been countlessly reassured that my figure is a good one, now that I am grown-up enough to understand that most of my feelings have very little to do with the reality of my shape, I am nonetheless obsessed by breasts. I cannot help it. I grew up in the did
I
terrible fifties
be
men and
— with
rigid stereotypical sex roles, the insistence that
dress like
men and women
the intolerance of androgyny
— and
I
be
women and
cannot shake
it,
dress like
men
women,
cannot shake
my
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
474
feelings of inadequacy. Well, that time
gone, right? All those exagger-
is
ated examples of breast worship are gone, right? freaks, right? logical
I
know
remains of
worship.
You
it
all
And
that.
all,
yet here
stuck with
probably think
I
am
out to write a confession that
is
Those women were
am, stuck with the psycho-
I
my own
peculiar version of breast
crazy to go on like
meant
to hit
this:
you?
I tell
a completely different person.
After tell total life,
I
I
I
went into therapy,
If
had had them,
I
condition.
I
told that
I
set
I
I
am
thoroughly
would have been
me to breasts were the hang-up of my to have been bothered by my
a process that
was insane
was also frequently
tremely boring on the subject.
have
honestly believe that.
strangers at cocktail parties that
was often
I
you with the shock of
recognition, and instead you are sitting there thinking
warped. Well, what can
here
made
it
possible for
by close friends, that
told,
And my
I
was ex-
the ones with nice
girl friends,
would go on endlessly about how their lives had been far more miserable than mine. Their bra straps were snapped in class. They couldn't sleep on their stomachs. They were stared at whenever the word "mountain" cropped up in geography. And Evangeline, good God what they went through every time someone had to stand up and recite the
big breasts,
Prologue to Longfellow's Evangeline:
".
.
.
stand like druids of eld ...
/
With beards that rest on their bosoms." It was much worse for them, they tell me. They had a terrible time of it, they assure me. I don't know
how
lucky I
I
was, they say.
have thought about their remarks,
place, considered their point of view.
I
tried to
put myself in their
think they are
full
of
shit.
Max Apple THE ORANGING OF AMERICA
I
From
any ordinary 1964 Cadillac limousine. In the expensive space between the driver and passengers, where some the outside
it
looked
like
even bathrooms, Mr. Howard Johnson kept a tidy icecream freezer in which there were always at least eighteen flavors on installed bars or
hand, though Mr. Johnson ate only
vanilla.
The
freezer's
power came
from the battery with an independent auxiliary generator as a back-up system. Although now Howard Johnson means primarily motels, Millie, Mr. HJ, and Otis Brighton, the chauffeur, had not forgotten that ice cream was the cornerstone of their empire. Some of the important tasting was
done
Mr. HJ might have reports in his pocket from sales executives and marketing analysts, from home economists and chemists, but not until Mr. Johnson reached over the lowered Plexiglas to spoon a taste or two into the expert waiting mouth of Otis Brighton did he make any final flavor decision. He might go ahead with butterfly shrimp, with candy kisses, and with packaged chocolate-chip cookies on the opinion of the specialists, but in ice cream he trusted only Otis. From the back seat Howard Johnson would keep his eye on the rearview mirror, where the reflection of pleasure or disgust showed itself in the dark eyes of Otis Brighton no matter what the driving conditions. He could be stalled in a commuter rush with the engine overheating and a dripping oil pan, and still a taste of the right kind never went unappreciated. When Otis finally said, "Mr. Howard, that shore is sumpin, that one is um-hum. That is it, my man, that is it." Then and not until then did Mr. HJ finally decide to go ahead with something like banana-fudgestill
ripple royale.
in the car.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
476
Mildred rarely tasted and Mr. HJ was addicted to one scoop of vanilla every afternoon at three, eaten from his aluminum dish with a disposable plastic spoon.
The
duties of Otis, Millie,
and Mr. Johnson
were so divided that they rarely infringed upon one another in the car, which was their office. Neither Mr. HJ nor Millie knew how to drive, Millie and Otis understood little of financing and leasing, and Mr. HJ left
"The Howard Johnson
the compiling of the "Traveling Reports" and
Newsletter"
strictly to
Mildred Bryce.
It
the literary style of his longtime associate. Miss
was an
ideal division of labor,
which, in one form or
another, had been in continuous operation for well over a quarter of a century.
While Otis listened
to the radio
behind
his
soundproof
Plexiglas,
while Millie in her small, neat hand compiled data for the newsletter,
Mr. HJ
liked to lean
back into the spongy leather seat looking through
his specially tinted windshield at the fleeting land. Occasionally, lulled
by the hum of the freezer, he might doze off, his large pink head lolling toward the shoulder of his blue suit, but there was not too much that Mr. Johnson missed, even in advanced age. Along with Millie he planned their continuous itinerary as they traveled.
Mildred would tape a large green
relief
map of the
United States
them from Otis. The mountains on the map were light brown and seemed to melt toward the valleys like the crust of a fresh apple pie settling into cinnamon surroundings. The existing HJ houses (Millie called the restaurants and motels houses) were marked by to the Plexiglas separating
orange dots, while projected future
map alive
sites
bore white dots.
The deep green
seemed much more than the miles that twinkled past Mr. Johnson's gaze, and nothing with
its
brown mountains and
colorful dots
gave the ice-cream king greater pleasure than watching Mildred with her fine touch,
an orange
and using the
original crayon, turn
an empty white dot into
fulfillment.
grown into a tree, Millie," Mr. HJ liked to say at such moments when he contemplated the map and saw that it was good. They had started traveling together in 1925: Mildred, then a secretary to Mr. Johnson, a young man with two restaurants and a dream of hospitality, and Otis, a twenty-year-old busboy and former driver of a Louisiana mule. When Mildred graduated from college, her father, a Michigan doctor who kept his money in a blue steel box under the examining table, encouraged her to try the big city. He sent her a monthly allowance. In those early days she always had more than Mr. Johnson, who paid her $16. 50 a week and meals. In the first decade they traveled only on weekends, but every year since 1936 they had spent at "It's like
a seed
Max Apple least six
months on the
road, and
come
much
might have gone on
it
Mildred's pain and the trouble in
477
New
York with Howard
Jr.
longer
if
had not
so close together.
They were
all
stoical at the
Los Angeles International Airport. Otis
waited at the car for what might be his
Johnson traveled toward the
last
job while Miss Bryce and Mr.
New York plane
along a silent moving
Howard while they passed
floor.
mural of a Mexican landscape and some Christmas drawings by fourth graders from Watts. For forty years they had been together in spite of Sonny and the others, but at this most recent appeal from New York Millie urged him to go Millie stood beside
Sonny had
back.
cabled,
"My God, Dad,
a
you're sixty-nine years old,
haven't you been a gypsy long enough? Board meeting
December
third
with or without you. Policy changes imminent."
Normally, they ignored Sonny's cables, but
this
time Millie wanted
wanted to be alone with the pain that had recently come to her. She had left Howard holding the new canvas suitcase in which she had packed her three notebooks of regional reports along with his aluminum dish, and in a moment of real despair she had even packed the orange crayon. When Howard boarded Flight 965 he looked old to Millie. His feet dragged in the wing-tipped shoes, the hand she shook was moist,
him
to go,
he passed from her sight down the entry ramp Mildred Bryce felt a fresh new ache that sent her hobbling toward the car. Otis had unplugged the freezer, and the silence caused by the missing hum was as intense to Millie as her abdominal pain. It had come quite suddenly in Albuquerque, New Mexico, at the grand opening of a 210-unit house. She did not make a fuss. Mildred the
lip felt dry,
and
as
Bryce had never caused trouble to anyone, except perhaps to Mrs. HJ. Millie's quick precise actions, angular face, and thin body made her seem birdlike, especially next to
Mr. HJ,
six
three with splendid white hair
Howard was slow and sure. He hours while Millie fidgeted on the seat,
accenting his dark blue gabardine
suits.
same position for wrote memos, and filed reports in the small gray cabinet that sat in front of her and parallel to the ice-cream freezer. Her health had always been could
sit
in the
good, so at
first
New Mexico
she tried to ignore the pain.
It
was
gas:
it
was perhaps the
But she could not convince away the pain. It stayed like a match burning around in her belly, etching itself into her as the round HJ emblem was so symwater or the cooking
oil in
the
which she had kicked off in that accompanied the pain. She felt as if her sweat would engulf
metrically embroidered into the bedspread,
the flush
fish dinner.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
478
the foam mattress and crisp percale sheet. Finally, Millie brought
knees and
made
up her
if
being as small as possible might
make her misery disappear. It worked The little circle of hot torment was all
for everything except the pain.
a ball of herself as
that remained of her,
and when
sometime in the early morning it left, it occurred to her that perhaps she had struggled with a demon and been suddenly relieved by the coming of daylight. She stepped lightly into the bathroom and before a full-length mirror (new in HJ motels exclusively) saw herself whole and unmarked, but sign enough to Mildred was her smell, damp and musty, sign enough that something had begun and that something else would finally at
therefore necessarily end.
II
Howard Jr.'s message had given her the excuse she needed. There was no reason why Millie could not tell Howard she was sick, but telling him would be admitting too much to herself. Along with Howard Johnson Millie had grown rich beyond dreams. Her inheritance, the $100,000 from her father's steel box Before she had the report from her doctor,
in 1939,
Mr. Johnson, who desperately needed it, and of that investment brought Millie enough capital to employ
went
the results
directly to
Chase Manhattan with the management of her finances. With money beyond the hope of use, she had vacationed all over the world and spent some time in the company of celebrities, but the two people
reality
at the
of her
life, like his,
was
in the
back seat of the limousine, waiting
which the needs of the automobile and the human body met the undeviating purpose of the highway and momentarily confor that point at
quered
it.
Her life was measured in rest stops. She, Howard, and Otis had found them out before they existed. They knew the places to stop between Buffalo and Albany, Chicago and Milwaukee, Toledo and Columbus, Des Moines and Minneapolis, they knew through their own bodies, measured in hunger and discomfort in the '30s and '40s when they would stop at remote places to buy land and borrow money, sensing in themselves the hunger that would one day be upon the place. People were wary and Howard had trouble borrowing (her $100,000 had perhaps been the key) but invariably he was right. Howard knew the land, Mildred thought, the way the Indians must have known it. There were even spots along the way where the earth itself seemed to make men stop. Howard had a sixth sense that would sometimes lead them from the main roads
Max to, say, a
dark green
field in
Apple
479
Iowa or Kansas. Howard, who might have
seemed asleep, would rap with his knuckles on the Plexiglas, causing the knowing Otis to bring the car to such a quick stop that Millie almost flew into her filing cabinet. And before the emergency brake had settled into its final prong, Howard Johnson was into the field and after the scent. While Millie and Otis waited, he would walk it out slowly. Sometimes he would sit down, disappearing in a field of long and tangled weeds, or he might find a large smooth rock to sit on while he felt some secret vibration from the place. Turning his back to Millie, he would mark the spot with his urine or break some of the clayey earth in his strong pink hands, sifting it like flour for a delicate recipe. She had actually seen him chew the grass, getting down on all fours like an animal and biting the tops without pulling the entire blade from the soil. At times he ran in a slow jog as far as his aging legs would carry him. Whenever he slipped out of sight behind the uneven terrain, Millie felt him in danger, felt that something alien might be there to resist the civilizing instinct of
Johnson.
Once when Howard had been out
of sight for
Howard
more than an
hour and did not respond to their frantic calls, Millie sent Otis into the field and in desperation flagged a passing car. "Howard Johnson is lost in that field," she told the surprised driver. "He went in to look for a new location and we can't find him now." "The restaurant Howard Johnson?" the man asked. "Yes. Help us please." The man drove off, leaving Millie to taste in his exhaust fumes the barbarism of an ungrateful public. Otis found Howard asleep in a of light blue wild flowers.
He had
Millie brought water to him,
field
collapsed from the exertion of his run.
and when he
felt better, right
there in the
he ate his scoop of vanilla on the very spot where three years later they opened the first fully air-conditioned motel in the world. When she stopped to think about it, Millie knew they were more than businessmen, they were pioneers. And once, while on her own, she had the feeling too. In 1951 when she visited the Holy Land there was an inkling of what field,
happened without any warning on a bus crowded with tourists and resident Arabs on their way to the Dead Sea. Past ancient Sodom the bus creaked and bumped, down, down, toward the lowest point on earth, when suddenly in the midst of the crowd and her stomach queasy with the motion of the bus, Mildred Bryce experienced an overwhelming calm. A light brown patch of earth surrounded by a few pale desert rocks overwhelmed her perception, seemed closer to her than the Arab lady in the black flowered dress
Howard must have
felt all
the time.
It
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
480
pushing her basket against Millie stop the bus.
Had
at that very
moment. She wanted
to
she been near the door she might have actually
jumped, so strong was her sensitivity to that barren spot in the endless desert. Her whole body ached for it as if in unison, bone by bone. Her limbs tingled, her breath
came
in short gasps, the sky rolled
out of the
bus windows and obliterated her view. The Arab lady spat on the floor
and moved a suspicious eye over a squirming Mildred.
When
Dead Sea, the Arabs and tourists clutching damaged limbs, while Millie pressed
the bus stopped at the
rushed to the soupy brine
who
twenty dollars American into the dirty palm of a cab-driver
took her
back to the very place where the music of her body began once more sweetly as the
first
as
time. While the incredulous driver waited, Millie
walked about the place wishing Howard were there to understand her
new understanding
of his kind of process. There was nothing there,
absolutely nothing but pure air
was hot and
and
rest there,
stale as a
and
as
bliss.
The sun
beat on her like a wish, the
Viennese bathhouse, and yet Mildred
her cab
bill
mounted she
felt
peace
actually did rest in the
When the pleeze. Why driver, wiping the sweat from his neck, asked, "Meesez American woman wants Old Jericho in such kind of heat?" When he said "Jericho," she understood that this was a place where men had always miserable barren desert of an altogether unsatisfactory land. .
.
.
dim antiquity Jacob had perhaps watered a flock here, and not far away Lot's wife paused to scan for the last time the city of her youth. Perhaps Mildred now stood where Abraham had been visited by a vision and, making a rock his pillow, had first put the ease into the earth. Whatever it was, Millie knew from her own experience that rest was created here by historical precedent. She tried to buy that piece of land, going as far as King Hussein's secretary of the interior. She imagined a Palestinian HJ with an orange roof angling toward Sodom, a seafood restaurant, and an oasis of fresh fruit. But the land was in dispute between Israel and Jordan, and even King Hussein, who expressed adstopped. In
miration for
Howard Johnson, could not
sell
to Millie the place of her
comfort.
That was her single visionar\' moment, but sharing them with Howard was almost as good. And to end all this, to finally stay in her eighteenth-floor Santa Monica penthouse, where the Pacific dived into California, this seemed to Mildred a paltry conclusion to an adventurous life. Her doctor said it was not so serious, she had a bleeding ulcer and must watch her diet. The prognosis was, in fact, excellent. But Mildred, fifty-six and alone in California, found the doctor less comforting than most of the rest stops she had experienced.
Max Apple
481
III
Second World War, was hardly a civilized place for travelers. Millie, HJ, and Otis had a twelve-cylinder '47 Lincoln and snaked along five days between Sacramento and Los Angeles. "Comfort, comfort," said HJ as he surveyed the redwood forest and the bubbly surf while it slipped away from Otis, who had rolled his trousers to chase the ocean away during a stop near San Francisco. Howard Johnson was contemplative in California. They had never been in the West before. Their route, always slightly new, was yet bound by Canada, where a person couldn't get a tax break, and roughly by the Mississippi as a western frontier. Their journeys took them up the eastern seaboard and through New England to the early reaches of the Midwest, stopping at the plains of Wisconsin and the cool crisp edge of Chicago where two HJ California, right after the
lodges twinkled at the lake.
One day
on the way from Chicago to Cairo, Illinois, HJ looked long at the green relief maps. While Millie kept busy with her filing, HJ loosened the tape and placed the map across his soft round knees. The map jiggled and sagged, the Mid- and Southwest hanging between his legs. When Mildred finally noticed that look, he had been staring at the map for perhaps fifteen minutes, brooding over it, and in 1947 while
Milhe knew something was
HJ looked
in the air.
map
at that
the
way some people looked down from an
airplane trying to pick out the familiar from the colorful mass receding
beneath them. Howard Johnson's eye flew over the land
— over the Te-
Nevada, over the long thin gouge of the Canyon charting his course by rest stops the way an antique mar-
tons, over the Sierra
flew his gaze iner might
—
have gazed
at
the
stars.
." He looked he said just north of Carbondale, "Millie toward her, saw her fingers engaged and her thumbs circling each other in anticipation. He looked at Millie and saw that she saw what he saw. "Millie" HJ raised his right arm and its shadow spread across the continent like a prophecy "Millie, what if we turn right at Cairo and go that way?" California, already peeling on the green map, balanced on HJ's left knee like a happy child.
"Millie,"
.
—
Twenty
ment
.
—
years later Mildred settled in her eighteenth-floor apart-
owned by Lawrence Welk. Howard was in New car waited in Arizona. The pain did not return as
in the building
York, Otis and the
had appeared that night in Albuquerque, but it hurt with dull regularity and an occasional streak of dark blood from her bowels kept her mind on it even on painless days. powerfully as
it
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
402
Directly beneath her gaze were the organized activities of the
golden-age groups, tiny figures playing bridge or shuffleboard or looking out at
at
the water from their benches as she sat on her sofa and looked out
them and the
ocean. Mildred did not regret family
fluffy
life.
The HJ
houses were her offspring. She had watched them blossom from the
rough youngsters of the
'40s
with steam heat and even occasional kitch-
enettes into cool mature adults with king-sized beds, color TVs, and
room
service.
houses
just as
Her late years were spent comfortably in the modern one might enjoy in age the benefits of a child's prosperity.
She regretted only that
was probably over.
it
•
•
But she did not give up completely
one day eighty.
until she received a personal letter
her that she was eligible for burial insurance until age
telling
A
•
$1000 policy would guarantee a complete and dignified service.
crumpled the advertisement, but a few hours later called her Los Angeles lawyer. As she suspected, there were no plans, but as the executor of the estate he would assume full responsibility, subject of course Millie
to her approval. "I'll
do
it
myself," Millie had said, but she could not bring herself
do it. The idea was too alien. In more than forty years Mildred had not gone a day without a shower and change of underclothing. Everything about her suggested order and precision. Her fingernails were shaped so that the soft meat of the tips could stroke a typewriter without damaging the apex of a nail, her arch slid over a 6B shoe like an egg in a shell, and never in her adult life did Mildred recall having vomited. It did not seem right to suddenly let all this sink into the dark green earth to
of Forest a nickel.
Lawn because some organ It
was not
right
and she wouldn't do
in the
apartment, to write
lawyer
make an appointment
but canceled
it
or other developed a hole as big as
it
into the lease for her with
the day before. "They
aloud to herself, "and
they'll
bury
me
it.
if
Her
first
idea was to stay
necessary.
She had the
Mr. Welk's management
will just
firm,
think I'm crazy," she said
anyway."
She thought of cryonics while reading a biography of William Chesebrough, the man who invented petroleum jelly. Howard had known him and often mentioned that his own daily ritual of the scoop of vanilla was like old
brough
Chesebrough's two teaspoons of Vaseline every day. Cheselived to
be ninety. In the biography
it
said that after taking the
he drank three cups of green tea to melt everything down, rested for twelve minutes, and then felt fit as a young man, even in his late eighties. When he died they froze his body and Millie had her idea. The Vaseline people kept him in a secret laboratory some-
daily dose of Vaseline,
Max Apple
483
where near Cleveland and claimed he was Lenin,
whom
in better condition
the Russians kept hermetically sealed, but at
than
room tem-
perature.
phone book she found the Los Angeles Cryonic Society and asked it to send her information. It all seemed very clean. The cost was $200 a year for maintaining the cold. She sent the pamphlet to her lawyer to be sure that the society was legitimate. It wasn't much money, but, still, if they were charlatans, she didn't want them to take advantage of her even if she would never know about it. They were aboveboard, the lawyer said. "The interest on a ten-thousand-dollar trust fund would pay about five hundred a year," the lawyer said, "and they only charge two hundred dollars. Still, who knows what the cost might be in say two hundred years?" To be extra safe, they put $25,000 in trust for eternal maintenance, to be eternally overseen by Longstreet, Williams, and their eternal heirs. When it was arranged, Mildred felt better than she had in In the
weeks.
IV
Four months
to the
day
geles International Airport,
after she
he returned
had for
Howard
at the
Los An-
Mildred without the
slightest
left
warning. She was in her housecoat and had not even washed the night
cream from her cheeks when she saw through the viewing space in her door the familiar long pink jowls, even longer in the distorted glass. "Howard," she gasped, fumbling with the door, and in an instant he was there picking her up as he might a child or an ice-cream cone while her tears fell like dandruff on his blue suit. While Millie sobbed into his soft padded shoulder, HJ told her the good news. "I'm chairman emeritus of the board now. That means no more New York responsibilities.
They
still
have to
listen to
me
because we hold the majority of the
Howard Junior and Keyes will take care of is new home-owned franchises. And, Millie,
Our
stock, but
the business.
main
job
guess where we're
going
first?"
So overcome was Mildred that she could not hold back her sobs even to guess. Howard Johnson put her down, beaming pleasure through his old bright eyes. "Florida,"
HJ
said,
then slowly repeated
it,
"Flor-
and guess what we're going to do?" "Howard," Millie said, swiping at her tears with the filmy lace cuffs of her dressing gown, "I'm so surprised I don't know what to say. You could tell me we're going to the moon and I'd believe you. Just seeing you again has brought back all my hope." They came out of the hallway idda,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
484
and sat on the sofa that looked out over the hands on his knees like paperweights.
Pacific.
HJ,
all
pink, kept his
you about anything and never could. We're going down near where they launch the rockets from. ." I've heard HJ leaned toward the kitchen as if to check for spies. He looked at the stainless-steel-and-glass table, at the built-in avocado appli"Millie, you're almost right.
.
can't fool
I
.
ances, then leaned his large moist
lips
toward Mildred's
ear.
"Walt Dis-
new Disneyland down there. They're trying to keep it a secret, but his brother Roy bought options on thousands of acres. We're going down to buy as much as we can as close in as we can." Howard sparkled. "Millie, don't you see, it's a sure thing." After her emotional outburst at seeing Howard again, a calmer ney
is
planning right
this
minute
a
Millie felt a slight twitch in her upper joy
stomach and
in the midst of
her
was reminded of another sure thing. They would be a few weeks in Los Angeles anyway. Howard wanted
to thoroughly scout out the existing Disneyland, so Millie
She could go, as her heart directed and points beyond. She could take the future
to think
it
out.
Disneyland ride or she could
listen to the
had some time
her, with as
it
HJ to Florida happened like a
dismal eloquence of her ulcer
and try to make the best arrangements she could. Howard and Otis would take care of her to the end, there were no doubts about that, and the end would be the end. But if she stayed in this apartment, sure of the arrangements for later, she would miss whatever might still be left before the end. Mildred wished there were some clergyman she could consult, but she had never attended a church and believed in no religious doctrine. Her father had been a firm atheist to the very moment of his office suicide, and she remained a passive nonbeliever. Her theology was the order of her own life. Millie had never deceived herself; in spite of her riches all she truly owned was her life, a pocket of habits in the burning universe. But the habits were careful and clean and they were best represented in the body that was she. Freezing her remains was the closest image she could conjure of eternal life. It might not be eternal and it surely would not be life, but that damp, musty feel, that odor she smelled on herself after the pain, that could be avoided, and who knew what else might be saved from the void for a small initial investment and $200 a year. And if you did not believe in a soul, was there not every reason to preserve a body? •
•
•
Mrs. Albert of the Cryonic Society welcomed Mildred to a tour of the premises. "See
it
while you can," she cheerfully told the group (Millie,
two men, and a boy with notebook and Polaroid camera). Mrs. Albert,
a
Max big
woman
perhaps
cheekbones, but having
if
lost its
around her long chin and pointed spring, the skin merely hung at her neck
the way she took the concrete
rest
of her to join in the decline.
down
to the vault,
it
the wait would be long. "I'm not ready for the freezer yet.
I
group
I
take
down
here,
Millie believed her. "I
it's
may
stairs
gonna be
looked as tell
every
a long time until they get
me."
not be the world's smartest cookie
Albert looked directly at Millie
flesh.
tight
animal waiting for the
like a patient
485
her mid-sixties, carried a face heavy in
in
Perhaps once the skin had been
From
Apple
— "but
a bird in the
hand
is
"
— Mrs.
the only bird
know, huh? That's why when it does come Mrs. A is going to be right here in this facility, and you better believe it. Now, Mr. King on your left" she pointed to a capsule that looked like a large bullet to Millie "Mr. King is the gentleman who took me on my first tour, cancer finally but had everything perfectly ready and I would say he was in prime I
.
.
.
— —
cooling state within seconds and
I
believe that
if
they ever cure cancer,
and you know they will the way they do most everything nowadays, old Mr. King may be back yet. If anyone got down to low-enough temperature immediately it would be Mr. King." Mildred saw the boy write "Return of the King" in his notebook. "Over here is Mr. and Mizz Winkleman, married sixty years, and went off within a month of each other, a lovely, lovely couple."
While Mrs. Albert continued her necrology and posed for a photo beside the Winklemans, Millie took careful note of the neon-lit room filled with bulletlike capsules. She watched the cool breaths of the group gather like flowers on the steel and vanish without surface.
The
dimming the
bright
capsules stood in straight lines with ample walking space
between them. To Mrs. Albert they were friends, to Millie it seemed as if she were in a furniture store of the Scandinavian type where elegance is suggested by the absence of material, where straight lines of steel, wood, and glass indicate that relaxation too requires some taste and is not an indifferent sprawl across any soft object that happens to be nearby.
Cemeteries always bothered Millie, but here she
felt
none of the
dread she had expected. She averted her eyes from the cluttered graveyards they always used to pass at the tips of cities in the early days.
Fortunately, the superhighways twisted
traffic into
the city and away
from those desolate marking places where used-car lots and the names of famous hotels inscribed on barns often neighbored the dead. Howard had once commented that never in all his experience did he have an
good location near a cemetery. You could put a lot of things there, you could put up a bowling alley, or maybe even a theater. intuition of a
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
486
but never a motel, and Millie knew he was his
houses but
it
He knew where
right.
was Millie who knew how. From that
angling toward the east, the
HJ design and the
to put
orange roof
first
idea had been Millie's.
She had not invented the motel, she had changed it from a place where you had to be to a place where you wanted to be. Perhaps, she thought, the Cryonic Society was trying to do the same for cemeteries. When she and Howard had started their travels, the old motel courts huddled like so many dark graves around the stone marking of the highway. And what traveler coming into one of those dingy cabins could watch the watery rust dripping from his faucet without thinking of everything he was missing by being a traveler ... his two-stall garage, his wife small in the half-empty bed, his children with hair the color of that rust.
Under the orange Howard Johnson roof all this changed. For about the same price you were redeemed from the road. Headlights did not dazzle you on the foam mattress and percale sheets, your sanitized glasses and toilet appliances sparkled like the mirror behind them. The room was not just there, it awaited you, courted your pleasure, sat like a young bride outside the walls of the city wanting only to please you, you only
you on the smoothly pressed sheets, your friend, your one-night destiny. As if it were yesterday, Millie recalled right there in the cryonic vault the moment when she had first thought the thought that made
Howard Johnson Howard
And when
Johnson's.
she told
Howard her
decision that evening after cooking a cheese souffle and risking a taste of
wine, a cool
it
was that memory she invoked
autumn day
in the '30s
Millie with a free afternoon in
spent at the farm of a
when
New
for
both of them, the
memory
of
found Hampshire, an afternoon she had a break in their schedule
man who had once been
her teacher and remem-
bered her after ten years. Otis drove her out to Robert Frost's farm,
where the poet made for her a lunch of scrambled eggs and 7-Up. Millie and Robert Frost talked mostly about the farm, about the cold winter he was expecting and the autumn apples they picked from the trees. He was not so famous then, his hair was only streaked with gray as Howard's was, and she told the poet about what she and Howard were doing, about what she felt about being on the road in America, and Robert Frost said he hadn't been that much but she sounded like she knew and he believed she might be able to accomplish something. He did not remember the
poem she wrote in his class but that didn't matter. "Do you remember, Howard, how I introduced you
him? Mr. Frost, this is Mr. Johnson. I can still see the two of you shaking hands there beside the car. I've always been proud that I introduced you to one another." Howard Johnson nodded his head at the memory, seemed as to
Max
Apple
487
why she would new Disneyland.
nostalgic as Millie while he sat in her apartment learning
Howard Johnson's to the "And after we left his farm, Howard, remember? Otis took the car in for servicing and left us with some sandwiches on the top of a hill overlooking a town, I don't even remember which one, maybe we never knew the name of it. And we stayed on that hilltop while the sun began not go to Florida to help bring
New Hampshire. — Howard, Howard "of to set in
felt
I
farmhouse.
Maybe
it
full
of poetry and"
— she looked
at
only about an hour's drive from Robert
love,
Frost's
so
was
just the
way we
felt
then, but
I
think
the sun set differently that night, filtering through the clouds like a big
paintbrush making the top of the town
thought what
if
all
orange.
And suddenly
I
the tops of our houses were that kind of orange, what a
would be, Howard, and my God, that orange stayed until the last drop of light was left in it. I didn't feel the cold up there even though it took Otis so long to get back to us. The feeling we had about that orange, Howard, that was ours and that's what I've tried to bring to every house, the way we felt that night. Oh, it makes me sick to think of Colonel Sanders, and Big Boy, and Holiday Inn, and Best Western ..." world
it
Howard patted her heaving back. and why she wanted to stay behind,
"It's all right, Millie, it's all right."
Now
he knew about her ulcer the mind that had conjured butterfly shrimp and twenty-eight flavors set himself a new project. He contemplated Millie sobbing in his lap the way he contemplated prime acreage. There was so little of her, less than one hundred pounds, yet without her Howard Johnson felt himself no match for the wily Disneys gathering near the moonport. that
He
left
her in
all
her sad resignation that evening,
left
her thinking
she had to give up what remained here to be sure of the proper freezing.
But Howard Johnson had other ideas. He did not cancel the advance reservations made for Mildred Bryce along the route to Florida, nor did
he remove her filing cabinet from the limousine. The man who hosted a nation and already kept one freezer in his car merely ordered another, this one designed according to cryonic specifications and presented to Mildred housed in a twelve-foot orange U-Haul trailer connected to the rear
bumper
of the limousine.
"Everything's here," he told the astonished Millie,
who thought
Howard had left the week before, "everything is here and you'll never have to be more than seconds away from it. It's exactly like a refrigerated truck." Howard Johnson opened the rear door of the U-Haul as proudly he had ever dedicated a motel. Millie's steel capsule shone within, surrounded by an array of chemicals stored on heavily padded rubber shelves. The California sun was on her back, but her cold breath hovered as
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
488 \isibly within the
U-Haul.
much
felt
as she
had
it
No
tears
came
to
Mildred now; she
that afternoon near ancient Jericho.
felt relief
On
Santa
Lawrence Welk's apartment building, Mildred Br\ce confronted her immortality, a gift from the ice-cream king, another companion for the remainder of her travels. Howard Johnson had turned away, looking toward the ocean. To his blue back and patriarchal white hairs, Mildred said, "Howard, you can do anything,"
Monica Boulevard,
in front of
and closing the doors of the U-Haul, she joined the host of the highways, a man with two portable freezers, ready now for the challenge of Disney World.
Roy
Blount,
Jr.
TRASH NO MORE
cannot help having a deep interest in the welfare of the State of Georgia and of the South as a whole. Still I never go into that part
/
of the country and come away without a certain sense of sadness. One can enjoy oneself superficially, but one must shut ones eyes.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
The world has heaped contumely on my people, even on the one of us who is President. But do we try to make people feel guilty for the misunderstanding? No. Do we file anti-defamation suits? No. That ain't my people's way. We don't even like to wear suits. And when we piss and moan, we piss and moan music. Otherwise, we just go on about our business, and wait for you to come South and then sell you spiritually tainted souvenirs. That's right. Like those ashtrays
highway that have a picture of an outhouse with inside
it,
a
you get along the voice coming from
saying,
I'm the Only
Man
in
GEORGIA
Who Knows What He's Those ashtrays have got
know how
a taint put
to live with original sin
Doing
—
on them, which since you all don't makes you nervous and irritable and
—
and in need of psychiatry. That might explain a lot. That might explain why Jimmy Carter's
rootless
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
490
Health, Education, and Welfare Department
trying to
is
stamp out smok-
same breath, so to speak, Jimmy goes down to North Carolina and announces that he sees no conflict between tobacco production and national health goals. He calls for research to make smoking "even more safe than it is today." So safe you could probably drive without a seat belt while doing it. He says this on the same day that the American Medical Association issues a report that cigarettes can cause irreversible damage not only to your lungs but also to your arteries and ing and yet in the
heart.
See, he can't just completely close
would
kill
down smoking, because
that
the tainted-outhouse-ashtray program. There's probably a
behind
similar reasoning
his
marijuana policy
— come
out for decrim-
and then poison it with parraquat and then have your drug-program head, I believe they called him, tell reporters that your aides smoke it a lot. It's all designed to confuse the North, to get on the North's nerves. I guess. But, hell, I don't know. Sometimes, I just don't know. inalizing
it
I
got the redneck White
Look
The I
blues.
him up there on the news.
at
President's
but
House
still
from Georgia
we owe
dues.
got the redneck White
House
blues.
was the spring before Freedom Summer, when flights of cleareyed Northern late adolescents would go South to help prove to the It
world what dumb-asses
my
people could be
(a
crusade that would be
you don't mind my saying so, no more imaginative than dynamiting fish). It was the spring of '64, then, and I was in Harvard Graduate School studying English literature, which for the most part was like learning about women at the Mayo Clinic. And one afternoon this African got up in my favorite class. Difficult Fiction, and denounced William Faulkner for his treatment of "non- Western people." Reading from a prepared text, in a way that struck me as unnaturally crisp, this African averred that all the non-Western people (which was to say, all the non-rednecks) in Faulkner were rendered as savage, stoic, menial, or deranged, and none of them was seen from within and how, then, could Faulkner be countenanced at physically brave, morally impeccable, and,
.
.
.
—
Harvard?
if
Roy Blount, "Well, got I
491
Jr.
DAMN it" was my reaction.
stood up and spluttered.
Spluttered as cogently as a person can splutter
who
is
trying to say
something he always thought went without saying. In the name of art; of Faulkner; of Clytie; of Joe Christmas; of stoicism; of derangement; of
my
and of not presuming to get any further inside anybody than you can feel your way. And as I spluttered, I felt more harshly than I ever had in the South while urging race-mixing or savagery; of
interior voice;
even pooh-poohing major football around me.
—
a
climate of opinion setting in
had managed to simplify my classmates' thinking, to raise a clear moral issue: this guy with the redneck accent is so dumb as to hate this I
passing African.
Mr. Monroe Engel, who taught it, though he hadn't had much to say to me since he'd found out that I was going into the army the following year. I liked not only Absalom, Absalom! but I
liked this class.
liked
I
What Maisie Knew and The Good Soldier and Under the Volcano and the other books we read. All my life I had wanted to be somewhere also
where people argued about books. (At Vanderbilt, where I had just spent four years, we had had grotesque race-relations arguments, punctuated by well-reared coeds' savage cries of "Would you want to take a shower with them?") And now that I had reached such a place, I found myself dismissed as a person with an incriminating accent. "Well, just ass, all
of you
all," I
thought
partly,
kiss
my
but only partly.
House blues. Even when we win one, we lose. I
got the redneck White
The
President's
from Georgia,
but he's wearing shoes. I
After class,
I
got the redneck White
House
spoke with the African,
who didn't seem
blues.
to feel like
he
belonged there either, and we went and played some tennis, but he didn't play like any African strokes,
whereas
I
I
had imagined.
whanged
He
played with grimly classic
loose-wristedly the
way
I'd
learned to hit a
on the red clay back home. But I can't claim to have been what is known as "a country boy." My grandparents and great-grandparents were farmers and carpenters and railroad workers, but my daddy mobilized his way up to national prominence in savings and loan, and I was raised in a town of 28,000
baseball
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
492
The
right outside Atlanta. Little
League
bees in
I
ever got
baseball, or fishing for croakers
Mason
my
neck red was playing
on vacation, or catching
with Sandy Penick and Sally Everett, or doing yard-
jars
work under duress. trip
only way
I
only followed a plow once, and that was on a
field
broke about four and a half feet of
new
with the Explorer Scouts.
I
ground under the July afternoon sun and felt dizzy and went and hid behind some bushes with some other Explorers until the Scoutmaster, who had come up with this plowing idea, and who had been a country boy, came and dragged us out. I can't even speak as one who was a real Boy Scout. I didn't much like to water ski or sleep in tents full of bugs. I wanted to be by myself and imagine I was playing major-league ball, which took place somewhere way off on a higher plane, where movies and the federal government and magazines came from and where they argued about books. I wanted to meet some Jews. We only had one in Decatur, and he was a Presbyterian. And I wanted to contribute to the media, from which I gathered that all the stuff I grew up with was low and corny. Not quintessentially low and corny, which might have been sort of exciting. ("Hey, look here in 'Lil Abner,' there's a pitcher of Daddy!")
But just for-all-intents-and-purposes low and corny. You might say I grew up sort of rosy-necked. Which means that if you were to call me that, I'd feel obliged to try to
whip your
ass (this
though) in a
just talk,
is
semi-detached way.
But
I've
put
all
that behind
me, except
in
my
South, bodily, and have resided right happily on a
mind.
fairly
I
have
left
high-crime
the
New
York street and come to know Arnold Schwarzenegger, Gilda Radner, and Elaine. I have appeared in a photograph in the Daily News as part of a crowd watching a shoot-out, and I have written for the best magazine and the best newspaper in the world, and for a lot of other ones. And up here on the national level I have often felt like a man who has been diagnosed crazy, and who has worried about it and resolved to improve, and then has visited a psychiatrists' convention, and finds himself saying, "Yeah, I sure am crazy. I'm extremely crazy," so nobody will take
him
for a psychiatrist.
But don't get
me wrong.
always eager to be the
first
to
I'm a hard-core First
amend something;
Amendment boy.
and, too,
I
I'm
cling to the
who put out publications have more sense, in some who read them, or at least more than the ones who
thought that people ways, than people
and all, one of the main things I have learned since leaving the South is that all those Northern institutions write letters to the editor.
Still
Roy Blount,
493
Jr.
from which I gathered that my culture was low and corny and crazy have their own ways of being low and corny and crazy. It's not so much my people who are crazy as it is the human mind. This is a hard thought, and one which my people have been instrumental in
keeping off most people's minds for a number of years.
My
have taken on the role of being crazy for everybody. Which thought Jimmy would do, in a new and educational way. But I'm having a hard time figuring out how he has. I
got the redneck White
I'm tired of
all
Half of him
is
House
is
people
what
I
blues.
these synthesized views.
Vance's,
the other Zbigniew's. I
He
got the redneck White
don't look like
House
blues.
much of a redneck, I know. Most of the time he a man who's come down from a slightly higher
and sounds, like level of church administration to give a talk to your congregation on good sound business reasons why you ought to tithe. But he said he was a redneck, when he ran for governor. And I thought that might count for something when he got elected President. I liked it when Senator Edward Brooke of Massachusetts complained, "When you get to the White House, the place looks physically dirty. People running around in jeans, it just doesn't look right." "Lord!" I thought to myself when I read that. "We have done something now! This is a great day for both our peoples, when you think about it. We have established that a famous black man can be anallooks,
repressive."
And rist.
I
liked
Lord help
it
— the supposed Washington — got that town a what they have
when Mark
us, this
is
Russell
sati-
for
in
satirist
offended by Hamilton Jordan's referring to Pennsylvania Avenue as
Pennsylvania Street.
"Now everybody knows
about Pennsylvania Avenue
and what it means to us here," Russell was quoted as harrumphing, in an in-depth story on the administration's shortcomings in People magazine.
You know what
else
I
liked?
I
liked
Jimmy
in that Playboy interview.
sounded to me exactly like what an open, sincere Baptist who has seen something of the world through Baptist eyes ought to say in Playboy. That was a Baptist id and a Baptist ego and a Baptist superego out there wrestling in full view of the nation, and that is the kind of thing I think of as honorable exposure. It mixed piety and the flesh in the best tradiIt
tion of country music.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
494
come out with more of that kind of stuff. That's real-life stuff. Back during the campaign, when Earl Butz was quoted as saying that all black folks want is "a tight pussy, loose shoes, and a warm place to shit," I wish Jimmy had responded by saying it sounded like a set of I
wish he'd
priorities that a lot of I
liked
it
when Jimmy was
out into the open.
them
people could identify with.
on
to let us in
Of course,
I
I
giving
Andy Young leeway
don't want people to be right
all
to bring things
the time.
I
want
their thinking.
guess that's hard to do
when
there are forty-four thou-
sand cameras, note pads, printing presses, teletype machines, deadlines, headlines, commentators, potshotters, leakers, and layers of ignorance
between you and the people you are talking to. But surely in the long run openness resists mistranslation better than secrecy does. That was in fact supposed to be a tenet of Jimmy's administration and Jimmy's subordinates, for a while there, were working various veins of disclosure.
—
But Jimmy himself got defensive; he seized up. And then he seized up the rest of them. •
What
if,
Jim Folsom
instead of old
who came up
•
•
Why Not the Best Jimmy,
He would
had been Kissing
out of the darkest South to be President?
Folsom was governor of Alabama, he used barefooted, because that
it
felt
down
to appear in public
When
forums
even better to him sometimes than loose
on sidewalks or auditorium stages barefooted, drunk, and in control of the situation, with no hint of straining after image. And he was liberal-minded. In his gubernatorial Christmas message in 1949, he said, "As long as the Negroes are held down by deprivation and lack of opportunity, all the other people will be held down alongside them." You notice he didn't say "all us other people." And he kept on talking that way through the fifties and sixties. He vetoed segregation bills and served Adam Clayton Powell whiskey in the governor's mansion. Once Kissing Jim had a whole lot of dignitaries out on his yacht watching a performance by the Alabama Air National Guard. He was bragging about all the new planes the Guard had and what they could do. Several of the planes took off and started looping around impressively, and then something went wrong with one of them, and it plunged into the water and exploded into fire and foam. shoes.
The
first
"Kiss
Now that,
to
my
lie
flat
to break the silence
was Folsom.
he said, "if that ain't a show." there may have been an element of apparent ass,"
but sometimes a President has to seem hard.
be Chief Executive,
it
If
might have bucked him up
insensitivity in
had gotten the point that he
old Jim
to
Roy Blount, wouldn't have
let
495
Jr.
what he would have accomplished
in the
way of
relieving
tional pauses. I
got the redneck White
The South 's
not gonna
Have you heard
House rise,
blues.
but
that country
just diffuse.
album
Andrews? got the redneck White House by
I
no telling awkward na-
liquor cut into his effectiveness, and there
Julie
blues.
is
Veronica Geng MY MAO
"Kay, would you like a dog? ..." Ike asked.
"Would
Oh, General, having a dog would be heaven!" "Well," he grinned, "if you want one, well get one." I?
— "Past Forgetting: My Love
Affair
with Dwight D. Eisenhower." "I
dont want you
"Vm
used to
"No,
I
to be alone," he said after a while.
it."
want you
to
have a dog."
— "A Loving Gentleman: The Love Story
of William Faulkner and
Why of
this
Meta Carpenter."
reminiscence, this public straining of noodles in the colander
memory? The Chairman
despised loose
talk.
Each time we
parted, he
would seal my lips together with spirit gum and whisper, "Mum for Mao." During our ten-year relationship, we quarrelled only once when I managed to dissolve the spirit gum with nail-polish remover and told my best friend about us, and it got back to a relative of the Chairman's in Mongolia. These things happen; somebody always knows somebody. But for one month the Chairman kept up a punishing silence, even though we had agreed to write each other daily when it was not possible to be together. Finally, he cabled this directive: "angrily attack the CRIMES OF SILLY BLABBERMOUTHS." I knew then that I was forgiven; his love ever wore the tailored gray uniform of instruction. Until now, writing a book about this well-known man has been the farthest thing from my mind except perhaps for writing a book about someone else. I lacked shirts with cuffs to jot memorandums on when
—
—
Veronica Geng
he
the room.
left
I
was innocent of boudoir
record the dates of his secret to disclose that these visits cial
visits
were
497 electronics.
I
free
connection with very important
offi-
I
paperwork and high-powered meetings). But how can
Adenauer
I
hide while
Even my friends are at it. Fran is writing "Konnie!: Love." Penny and Harriet are collaborating on "Yalta Grou-
women
other
even to
am now
to this country (though
in
failed
in
publish?
And my Great-Aunt 'Bill' of Particulars: An
pies."
Jackie has just received a six-figure advance
for "
Intimate
my
Continued silence on alone
among
part
the greatest
Memoir
of William
would only lead
men
Dean Howells."
Mao command a
to speculation that
of the century could not
young mistress. That this role was to be mine I could scarcely have foreseen until I met him in 1966. He, after all, was a head of state, I a mere spangle on the midriff of the American republic. But you never know what will happen, and then it is not possible to remember it until it has already happened. That is the way things were with our first encounter. Only now that it is past can I look back upon it. Now I can truly see the details of the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, with its many halls and doors, its carpeted Grand Suite. I can feel the static electricity generated by my cheap nylon waitress's dress, the warmth of the silver tray on which I literate
hoisted a selection of pigs-in-blankets.
Chairman Mao was upholstered armchair thing
I
didn't.
—
He was
He sat in the center of the room, in an man who looked as if he might know some-
alone.
a
round, placid, smooth as a cheese.
When
bent
I
over him with the hors d'oeuvres, he said in perfect English but with the
mid-back-rounded vowels pitched
in the typical sharps
and
flats
of Shao-
shan, "Will you have a bite to eat with me?"
"No,"
I
said.
In those days,
I
never said yes to anything.
I
was
holding out for something better than what everybody had.
He
closed his eyes.
By means of that tiny, almost impatient gesture, he had hinted that my way of life was wrong. I felt shamed, yet oddly exhilarated by the reproof. That night I turned down an invitation to go dancing with a suture salesman who gamely tried to date me once in a while. In some way I could not yet grasp, the Chairman had renewed my sense of possibility, and I just wanted to stay home. •
•
•
months later, there was a knock at my door. It was the Chairman, cheerful on rice wine. With his famous economy of expression, he embraced me and taught me the Ten Right Rules of
One
evening about
six
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
498
Lovemaking: Reconnoitre, Recruit, Relax, Recline, Relate, Reciprocate, Rejoice, Recover, Reflect, and Retire. I was surprised by his ardor, for I
knew the
he had been incapacitated by
talk that
a
back
the
injury' in
Great Leap Forward. In truth, his spine was supple as a peony stalk. The only difficulty was that it was sensitive to certain kinds of pressure. A few
moved
times he was
remind me, "Please, don't squeeze the Chair-
to
man."
When eyes closed.
opening
his
But what
had
awoke the next morning, he was sitting up in bed with his I asked him if he was thinking. "Yes," he said, without eyes. I was beginning to find his demeanor a little stylized.
I
right did
just started,
have to demand emotion? The Cultural Revolution
I
and ideas of the highest t\pe were surely forming them-
selves inside his skull.
He
said, "I
want
to
me
be sure you understand that you won't see
very often." "That's insulting,"
I
said.
"Did you suppose
I
thought China was
across the street?"
you mustn't expect me to solve your problems," he said. "I already have eight hundred million failures at home, and the last thing I need is another one over here." I asked what made him think I had problems. He said, "You do not know how to follow Right Rule Number Three: Relax. But don't expect me to help you. Expect nothing." I wanted to ask how I was supposed to relax with a world figure in my bed, but I was afraid he would accuse me of personalit}' cultism. "It's just
When
he
that
left,
he
said,
"Don't worry." •
I
ing,
thought about
and an hour
after
•
•
They had not been completely satisfyhe had left I wanted to hear them again. I needed
his words.
more answers. Would he like me better if I had been through something a divorce, a Long March, an evening at Le Club? Why should I exhaust myself in relaxation with someone who was certain to leave? Every night after work I studied the Little Red Book and wrote down phrases
—
from
it
down on
My
for
further thought:
their knees
.
.
.
"women
monsters of
all
.
.
.
certain contradictions
kinds
.
.
.
.
.
.
direct experience."
crowded with potential meaning. One afternoon I was sitting in the park, watching a group of schoolchildren eat their lunch. Two men in stained gray clothing lay on the grass. Once in a while they moved discontentedly from a sunny spot to a shady spot, or back again. The children ran around and screamed. When they left, one of the
life
began
men went
to feel
over to the wire wastebasket and
rifled
the children's
Veronica Geng
lunch bags
He
for leftovers.
Then he
We
Was
this
are going
downtown."
the "social order" that the
seemed unpleasant. something
man in a loud voice. downtown, Tommy. We are going
baited the other
kept saying, ''You are not going
downtown.
I
499
wondered
Chairman had mentioned?
It
should continue to hold out for
if I
better. •
•
•
As it happened, I saw him more often than he had led me to expect. Between visits, there were letters his accompanied by erotic maxims. These are at present in the Yale University Library, where they will remain in a sealed container until all the people who are alive now are dead. A few small examples will suggest their nature:
—
My broom
sweeps your dust kittens.
Love manifests itself in the hop from floor to pallet. If you want to know the texture of a flank, someone
must
roll over. •
We
•
•
always met alone, and after several years
dim sum
at
my
place
began to seem a bit hole-in-corner. "Why don't you ever introduce me to your friends?" I asked. The Chairman made no reply, and I feared I had pushed too hard. We had no claims on each other, after all, no rules but the ones he sprang on me now and then. Suddenly he nodded with vigor
and
said, "Yes, yes."
On
his next trip
me
he took
out to dinner with
Red Buttons. Years later, the Chairman would me, "Remember that crazy time we had dinner with Red? his friend
rant?
What an
I
was
startled
the Western press had failed to report.
by some facet of his character that I
saw, for instance, that he disliked
authority, for he joked bitterly about his own.
and all
my bedroom
him
for
to go,
raise
Once when
fell
No
than he would order, "Lights
he would
cry, "Pants!"
the change
In a restau-
evening!"
Each time we met,
inside
often say to
I
money
off!"
one arm from the bed lifted his
out of the pockets,
a drawer full of your
sooner had he stepped
that I've
I
When as
if
it
was time
hailing a taxi
pants off the back of a chair and said,
"This happens a
found on the
lot. I
have
floor."
he said, "and when it adds up to eighteen billion yuan, buy me a seat on the New York Stock Exchange." He laughed loudly, and then did his impersonation of a capitalist. "Bucks!" he shouted. "Gimme!" We both collapsed on the bed, weak with giggles at this private
"Keep
it,"
joke.
He was
the only
man
I
ever knew, this pedagogue in pajamas,
who
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
500
want power over me. In conversation, he was always testing my independence of thought. Once, I remember, he observed, "Marxism
did not
has tended to flourish in Catholic countries."
"What about China?" I said. "Is China your idea of a Catholic country?" "No, but, "See what I
um —
mean?" he
I
my
had learned
said, laughing.
lesson.
power over me, he encouraged me to go dancing with other men while he was away. Then we held regular critiques of the boyfriends I had acquired. My favorite, a good-looking
To
divest himself of sexual
Tex-Mex poet named Dan Juan, provided struction
and
us with rich material for in-
drill.
you like about Dan Juan?" the Chairman asked me once. "I'd really have to think about it," I said. "Maybe he's not so interesting," said the Chairman. "I see your point," I said. Then, with the rebelliousness of the
"What
is it
politically indolent,
I
my hand and brooded about my situation. I that helping me to enter into ordinary life — to go out
The Chairman think he was afraid
with
burst into tears.
took
Dan Juan and then
and so forth
to learn
why
I
should not be going out with him
— might not be very much help
Finally,
he
at
all.
said, "I don't like to think you're
alone
when
I'm not
here."
"I'm not always alone." "I'd like to give
you
a radio." •
The it.
radio never reached
His only other
gifts
•
•
me, although
we consumed
I
do not doubt that he sent
together: the bottles of rice wine,
which we drank, talking, knowing that while this was an individual solution, it was simple to be happy. Now other women have pointed out to me that I have nothing to show for the relationship. Adenauer gave Fran a Salton Hotray.
Stalin gave Harriet a set of swizzlesticks with
hammer-and-sickles on the tops. William Dean Howells gave
Aunt
diamond brooch
my
little
Great-
form of five ribbon loops terminating in diamond-set tassels, and an aquamarine-and-diamond tiara with scroll and quill-pen motifs separated by single oblong-cut stones mounted on an aquamarine-and-diamond band. That I have no such Jackie a
mementos means, they
in the
say, that the
they are being too negative, possibly.
Chairman
did not love me.
I
think
Veronica Geng
501
The Chairman believed that the most revolutionary word is "yes." What he liked best was for me to kiss him while murmuring all the English synonyms for "yes" that I could think of. And although neither of us believed in a in with
him
if I
life
close
beyond
my
this
one,
I
feel to this
day that
I
can check
eyes and say yes, yeah, aye, uh-huh, indeed,
agreed, natch, certainly, okeydoke, of course, right, reet, for sure, you
got
it,
well
and good, amen, but
bob, sure nuff, positively,
now
def, indubitably, right on, yes sirree
you're talking, yep, yup, bet your sweet
A, O.K., Roger wilco over and out.
Garrison Keillor SHY RIGHTS: WHY NOT PRETTY SOON?
Recently
I
read about a group of fat people
who had
organized to fight
They said that society oppresses the overweight by being thinner than them and that the term "overweight"
discrimination against themselves.
itself is
oppressive because
failed to
to
implies a "right" weight that the fatso has
it
make. Only weightists use such terms, they
be called "total" people and to be thought of
and they referred Don't get
to thin people as being "not
me
wrong. This
is
fine with
all
me.
in
said;
they
demanded
terms of wholeness;
there."
If,
to quote the article
if
may, "Fat Leaders Demand Expanded Rights Act, Claim Broad Base of Support," I have no objections to it whatsoever. I feel that it is their right to speak up and I admire them for doing so, though of course this
I
is
my own
only
opinion.
I
could be wrong.
Nevertheless, after reading the article,
Jimmy Carter demanding
I
wrote a
letter to President
that his administration take action to
end
dis-
crimination against shy persons sometime in the very near future.
pointed out three target areas rights
maybe could be
on the
line.
—
laws, schools,
safeguarded.
"Mr. President,"
I
I
tried
and
attitudes
I
— where shy
not to be pushy but
concluded, "you'll probably
kill
I
laid
me
it
for
what you've done for other groups, we shys have settled for 'peanuts.' As you may know, we are not ones to make threats, but it is clear to me that if we don't get some action on this, it could be a darned quiet summer. It is up to you, Mr. President. Whatever you decide will be okay by me. Yours very cordially." I never got around to mailing the letter, but evidently word got around in the shy community that I had written it, and I've noticed that saying this but
compared
to
Garrison Keillor
503
most shy persons are not speaking to me these days. I guess they think the letter went too far. Probably they feel that making demands is a betrayal of the shy movement (or "gesture," as many shys call it) and an insult to shy pride and that it risks the loss of some of the gains we have already made, such as social security and library cards.
Perhaps they are
right.
I
don't claim to have
all
the answers.
1
just
we ought to begin, at least, to think about some demands that we might make if, for example, we had to someday. That's all. I'm not saying we should make fools of ourselves, for heaven's sake! feel that
SHUT UP
(a
slogan)
Sometimes I feel that maybe we shy persons have borne our terrible burden for far too long now. Labeled by society as "wimps," "dorks," "creeps," and "sissies," stereotyped as Milquetoasts and Walter Mittys, and tagged as potential psychopaths ("He kept pretty much to himself," every psychopath's landlady is quoted as saying after the arrest, and for weeks thereafter every shy person
is
treated like a leper),
we
shys are
on every hand. Because we don't "talk out" our feelings, it is assumed that we haven't any. It is assumed that we never exclaim, retort, or cry out, though naturally we do on occasions when it seems called for. Would anyone dare to say to a woman or a Third World person, "Oh, don't be a woman! Oh, don't be so Third!"? And yet people make bold with us whenever they please and put an arm around us and tell us
desperately misunderstood
not to be shy.
Hundreds of thousands of our shy brothers and
sisters
(and "cous-
twice-removed," as militant shys refer to each other) are victimized every year by self-help programs that promise to "cure" shyness through ins
hand-buzzer treatments, shout training, spicy therapy, and every other
gimmick
in the book.
have "overcome" their shyness, but the sad
fact
diets,
Many is
silence-aversion
of them claim to
that they are afraid to
say otherwise.
To
movement, however, shyness is not a be "overcome." It is simply the way we are. And
us in the shy
disease to
disability or
in
our
own
something we shout about at public rallies and marches. It is Shy Pride. And while we don't have a Shy Pride Week, we do have many private moments when we keep our thoughts to ourselves, such as "Shy is nice," "Walk short," "Be proud
quiet way,
we
are secretly proud of
it.
It isn't
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
504
These are some that thought up myself. Perhaps other shy persons have some of their own, don't know.
shut up," and "Shy I I
is
beautiful, for the
most
part."
A NfUMBER ONE DISGRACE Discrimination against the shy
my own
is
our
countr>''s
No.
men and women
personal opinion. Millions of
disgrace in
i
are denied equal
employment, educational and recreational opportunities, and rewarding personal relationships simply because of their shyness. These injustices are nearly impossible to identif}', not only because the shy person will
not speak up
when
discriminated against, but also because the shy person
almost always anticipates being denied these rights and doesn't ask for
them
in the first place. (In fact,
when
it is
will politely decline a right
offered to them.)
Most shy lawyers agree
that shys can never obtain justice
current adversar\" system of law.
which
most shys
The
Sixth
Amendment,
for example,
on accuse anyone
gives the accused the right to confront his accusers,
the face of
it.
It
effectively denies shy persons the right to
under our
is
anti-shy
of anything.
One
solution might be to shift the burden of proof to the defendant
in case the plaintiff
chooses to remain
silent.
Or we could
second-class citizenship that would take away
some
create a special
rights,
such
as free
speech, bearing arms, and running for public office in exchange for
some
we need more. In any case, we need some sort of fairly totally new concept of law if we shys are ever going to enjoy equality, if indeed that is the sort of thing we could ever enjoy. other rights that
A MILLION-DOLLAR RIPOFF Ever}' year, shy persons lose millions of dollars in the
form of
overcharges that aren't questioned, shoddy products never returned to stores, refunds
never asked
for,
and bad food
in restaurants that
we
eat
mention all the money we lose and are too shy to claim when somebody else finds it. A few months ago, a shy friend of mine whom I will call Duke Hand (not his real name) stood at a supermarket checkout counter and watched the cashier rmg up thirty fifteen-cent Peanut Dream candy bars and a $3.75 copy of Playhouse for $18.25. He gave her a twenty-dollar auN'v^ay, not to
Garrison Keillor
505
and thanked her for his change, but as he reached she said, "Hold on. There's something wrong here." "No, really, it's okay," he said. bill
"Let
"No,
me
for his purchases,
see that cash register slip," she said.
really,
thanks anyway," he whispered. Out of the corner of
he could see that he had attracted attention. Other shoppers in the vicinity had sensed that something was up, perhaps an attempted price-tag switch or insufficient identification, and were looking his way. "It's not for me," he pleaded. "I'm only buying this for a friend." Nevertheless, he had to stand there in mute agony while she counted all of the Peanut Dreams and refigured the total and the correct change. (In fairness to her, it should be pointed out that Duke, while eventually passing on each copy of Playhouse to a friend, first reads it his eye,
himself.)
Perhaps one solution might be for clerks and other business personnel to try to be a place.
little bit
more
careful about this sort of thing in the
first
Okay?
HOW ABOUT To many
SHY HISTORY?
of us shys, myself included, the worst tragedy
we
is
the
presume to tell educators how to do their work, work that they have been specially trained to do, we do feel that schools must begin immediately to develop programs of shy history, or at the very least to give it a little consideraoppression of shy children in the schools, and while
don't
tion.
History books are blatantly prejudiced against shyness and shy per-
sonhood. They devote chapter after chapter to the accomplishments of
famous persons and quote them or very
little,
at great length,
about countless others
sought fame, and whose names are
Where
in the history
Black, Kilroy,
who had
very
and say nothing little
to say,
at all,
who never
lost to history.
The Lady in The Forgotten Man, The Little
books do we find mention of
The Unknown
Soldier,
Guy, not to mention America's many noted recluses? Where, for example, can we find a single paragraph on America's hundreds of scale models, those brave men of average height whose job it was to pose beside immense objects such as pyramids and dynamos so as to indicate scale in drawings and photographs? The only credit that "For an idea of its scale models ever received was a line in the caption
—
size,
note
man
(arrow, at left)."
as the dirigible, the
And
yet,
without them, such inventions
steam shovel, and the swing-span bridge would have
THEBESTOFMODERNHUMOR
5o6
mere toys, and natural wonders such as Old Faithful, the Grand Canyon, and the giant sequoia would have been dismissed as looked
like
hoaxes.
It
was
truly a thankless job.
SHYS ON STRIKE
The
models themselves never wanted any thanks. All they wanted was a rope or device of some type to keep them from falling off tall structures, plus a tent to rest in between drawings, and in 1906, after scale
one model was carried away by a tidal wave that he had been hired to pose in front of, they formed a union and went on strike. Briefly, the scale models were joined by a contingent of shy artists' models who had posed for what they thought was to be a small monument showing the Battle of Bull Run only to discover that it was actually a large bas-relief entitled "The Bathers" and who sat down on the job, bringing the work to a halt. While the artists' models quickly won a new contract and went back to work (on a non-representational basis), the scale models' strike was never settled. True to their nature, the scale models did not picket the work sites or negotiate with their employers. distance away and,
A
man.
year
contract,
no
it
later,
when when
quietly a short
asked about their demands, pointed to the next the union attempted to take a vote on the old
found that most of the scale models had moved away and
left
for\varding addresses. It
where
was the
last
attempt by shy persons to organize themselves any-
in the country.
NOW
Now its
They simply stood
is
IS
THE TIME, WE THINK
probably as good a time as any for
country to face up to
this
shameful treatment of the shy and to do something, almost anything,
about
it.
On the other hand, maybe
and see what happens.
All
I
know
manifesto for a bunch of people that the shy
who do
movement
is
it
would be better
is
that
who
it
isn't
to wait for a while
easy trying to write a
dare not speak their names.
And
being inverted by a tiny handful of shy militants
not speak for the majority' of shy persons, nor even very often for
themselves. This secret cadre, whose
members
are not
known even
to
each other, advocate doing "less than nothing." They believe in tokenism, and the smaller the token the better. They seek only to promote
more
self-consciousness: that ultimate shyness that shy mystics call "the
fear of fear
itself. "
What
is
even more
terrifying
is
the ultimate goal of
Garrison Keillor this radical wing: will
They
not stop until
507
and they they do. Believe me, we moderates have our faces to believe that they shall inherit the earth,
the wall.
Perhaps you are saying, "What can
I
do?
I
share your concern at
the plight of the shy and wholeheartedly endorse your two- (or three-) point program for shy equality.
My
adoption. addition,
home,
I
check
pledge myself to work vigorously for
is enclosed. In $100 $ ) agree to (circulate petitions, hold fund-raising party in my
and senator, serve on
local
committee, write
newspapers, hand out literature door-to-door during National
Friends of the Shy Drive)." Just
its
for ($10 $25 $50
write to congressman
letters to
I
remember: You
said
it,
not me.
Lisa Alther
THE COMMUNE EXCERPT FROM
Kinflicks
[Ginny Babcock, abandoning college and The Family and The Cih', ing the
American
Capitalist Imperialist
Vermont with other "Communists, food stamp recipients."
The cabin
stood on the
Economy,
joins a
resist-
commune
lesbians, draft-dodgers, atheists,
in
and
Ed.]
site
of an old farmhouse, which had burned
had been built only a few years earlier as a summer retreat and winter ski house b>- a stockbroker in New York City. It was unclear why he was willing to rent such a slice of hea\en, though it became clearer as time went on. But the original farmhouse had belonged to several generations of working farmers, so that the barn nearb\- was in good condition. We rushed out and bought a Guernsey milking cow named Minnie and half a dozen red and black Rhode Island hens and a vicious black and white Barred Rock rooster. All these we ensconced in the huge moldy old barn, the framework of which was massixe hand-hewn pine beams. We ordered a beehive and nailed it together and dumped a package of bees from Kentucky into it. We placed the hive in an old apple orchard behind the house; the blossoms had recently fallen off, and tiny green apples were forming. The growing season well under way, we dug and planted a hasty garden, reading instructions from a manual. We had left behind The Famih- and The City. The plan no\^^ according to Eddie, our resident theoretician, was to leave behind the American capitalist-imperialist economy altogether. We would grow and make almost all our material requirements our food, our clothes, our fuel. Incon\'enient expenses like taxes we would cover from our maple sugaring operation in early spring, there being a vast sugar bush and a sugar shack filled with all the necessary- equipment on a high hill behind
down.
It
—
Lisa Alther
509
By saving my dividend checks, we could soon afford a down payment on the farm, which was for sale at a ludicrously low price, for reasons which too soon became apparent to us. And eventually we might even be able to wean ourselves entirely from that corporate enemy of The People, the Westwood Chemical Corporation. We concluded that very soon we would be able authentically to cast our lot with The People. As far as representatives of The People went in Stark's Bog, we didn't know any. We had been into town several times in the old Ford pickup owned by Mona and Atheliah to buy supplies. As we clattered and jounced down the hill on which our farms sat, we could see Stark's Bog below us. Frame buildings clustered around three sides of the bog that gave the town its name. In most parts of Vermont could be seen houses of brick and stone, built to last for generations. In Stark's Bog, the cabin.
however, every house was frame, except
none of the could help
if
they
Mona and it
marsh mud in sea of muck, and animals
Atheliah, the
became
a
it
the marsh grasses rustled.
Mosquitoes teemed
Driving into town
beer
to stay
were trapped and sucked under, like mammoth eleprehistoric asphalt pits. Now, however, it was summer, and
that strayed into
stand.
Apparently
it.
the bog froze over. In the spring,
slime.
had planned
early settlers except the Blisses
In the winter, according to
phants in
Ira Bliss's stone one.
The
Stark's
floats or
The mud had grown
a coat of brilliant green
in fetid pools.
we would
first
Boggers would cluster here after supper to
butterscotch sundaes.
cream buy root
pass the Dairy Delite soft ice
Then
they would drive or walk to
the bog to watch the struggles of whatever animals were sinking in the goo offshore. Or if it was close to 6:27, they would amble to the train track
and wait
for the
had never stopped
window shades
New
York-Montreal
special to roar through.
there. In fact, passengers tended to pull
as they passed through, to the
down
(It
their
disappointment of the
waving town children.) Although Stark's Bog township actually included the bog and the surrounding hills and farms, the town proper consisted of one road,
frantically
Johnsbury and led to a border crossing into Quebec. Where the road passed through town, it was lined with a feed store, a hardware store, a hotel where hunters stayed in the fall, an IGA grocery
which came from
St.
gun shop, a taxidermy parlor, a funeral home, a farm equipment franchise, and a snow machine showroom called Sno Cat City. All these were housed in buildings from the early 1800's with colonial cornices and returns and doorways, which were pleasing in their simplicity. Pleasing to everyone but the Stark's Boggers, who were sick to death of them and store, a
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
510
had done
their best to tear
them down or cover them over with
fluores-
cent plastic and neon tubing and plate glass and gleaming chrome. Each
and beam structure on his premises and erect a molded plastic- and aluminum-sided showroom in its place. Sno Cat City, for instance, owned by Ira Bliss IV, had a huge orange mountain lion springing out from its facade; it being summer, businessman yearned
to raze the clapboard
row of gleaming yellow Honda trail bikes sat out front. Likewise, the goal of each Stark's Bog householder was to knock down or sell the despised frame colonial his family had infested for centuries, and to throw up a prefab ranch house that would be airtight, with everything
row
after
working properly.
We
found
to participate in
we went
so
into
Boggers eyed us in
all
this
profoundly disturbing.
modern American society. We didn't approve at all, and Stark's Bog as little as possible. When we did, the Stark's as we strolled from the feed store to the hardware store
—
our Off the Pigs T-shirts, with our braids swishing behind us
—with due that
from
Mona
to the fact that
store for it
that they referred to us
we bought
for
politically reprehensible of us
fattened steer starved five Third
containing meat recipes in the
on our own
life
as the
World
citizens.
wood
"Who
some
needs the decaying
burned
"We
stove.
when each
all
our cookbooks
should be able to make
force without holding innocent animals in bondage."
blissful sunlit fit
Soybean People
not to be vegetarians
didn't take long for things to start going sour
farming didn't collect
all
our animals. Eddie had decided
flesh of festering corpses?" she asked, as she
couple of
unison
fifty-pound sacks of soybeans at the feed
our own consumption, not
was
It
in
the enthusiasm of Incas inspecting newly arrived Spaniards.
all
We learned
it
indicated a willingness
It
our
— not more than a
One problem was that the regimens One morning Eddie went to the barn
months.
lifestyle.
fresh eggs for breakfast, while
I
put a cast iron
skillet
of to
on the
burner of the wood cookstove and fed the coals from the night before into a
modest
fire.
A
Intending to scramble the eggs,
I
cracked one on the
up to me. I opened the shell and dumped its contents into the bowl. It was tinged with brown and stank. "Uh, Ed, I think they're rotten." She stalked over and peered into the bowl and nearly gagged. I broke open a couple more that were the same rim of a bowl.
foul odor wafted
shade of murky brown.
"Maybe
them once a week isn't enough?" I suggested. "Shit! I'm damned if I'm going to spend my uhole fucking life collecting eggs!" She collapsed in a captain's chair in front of the stove. "It wouldn't take more than a few minutes every other day if we took turns,
"
I
collecting
pointed out.
Lisa Alther
"Turns! Schedules!
Lists!
511
you that you have suppose you'd like to mark on a
Did anyone ever
an accountant mentality, Ginny? calendar when to have sex, too?
I
tell
"
I
The
hadn't found
Elect
easy sharing a bathroom with a
it
these years, and
all
out in response to
this
goddam good
If I
weren't around to pay your
so fast
"An accountant mental-
attack.
thing that somebody in this place does!
Well,
a
—
bills,
Eddie, you'd be out on your ass
"There!" Eddie said triumphantly, gesturing toward
out
knew
all
along!
resented sharing your fucking blood
money
hand.
"It's
geois types are
"Oh
at last!
I
the same.
all
yeah?''
I
I
of
accumulated resentments poured
unwarranted
ity!
it's
my
member
it
can read you
I
knew
that
with me. like a
me
with her
deep down you
You
grasping bour-
book!"
screamed, standing over her, a quivering mass of
bourgeois rage. "I don't notice you making any efforts to earn honest
money. Miss Holier Than Thou! You seem perfectly content to let me pay your way with my despised blood money!" "Your money, my money! Who gives a shit about your goddam fucking money? Shove it up your ass, Scarlett." She slouched lower in her chair and glowered. "Get out! Get out, you freeloader! Vm paying the rent, this is my place. And I don't need you around calling me 'grasping' and 'bourgeois' while you live off me, like the cock-sucking parasite you are!" I had never before let the phrase "cock-sucking" pass my lips, though I had heard it often enough during my days with Clem. Eddie looked startled, but no more startled than I. We stared at each other in mutual shock. "So that's it," Eddie said, nodding her head knowingly. "What's
it?"
"You know
more
at stake
realized
what
"What
as well as
I
do from Psychology
here than rotten eggs or it
who
101,
Ginny, that there's
pays the rent.
And
I've just
is."
is it?"
"You're tired of me, Ginny.
You want
a
man.
A
cock," she added
with distaste.
"No! That's not true!"
been expecting it. You don't need to deny it. It was bound to happen sooner or later. You've just been playing around with me. Basically you're as hetero as they come. "But you're wrong, Eddie. You're all I want. With one functioning lover, what would I want with any more? After all, how much sex can "I've
"
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
512
one person endure?"
knelt beside her chair
I
and began massaging her
throbbing temples.
no use," Eddie
"It's
done
said glumly,
pushing
my
hands away. "What's
done."
is
"But nothing's done, Eddie,"
man?
protested with a laugh.
I
"What do
I
had men. You're so far superior as a lover, and in every other way, that it's ridiculous even to talk about it. I kissed her on the mouth tenderly. This was followed by an embrace. "You're crazy,
want with
a
I've
"
Eddie,"
I
whispered fondly
guess
I
I
in
her ear.
am.
Lacking eggs,
dished us up bowls of molded soybean salad
I
over from the night before. There was a great deal
We
entire salad, in fact.
beaver pond.
I
ate in silence at the table,
kept trying not to breathe as
I
left
over, almost the
left
which overlooked the
ate so that
I
wouldn't be
able to taste very well.
"Delicious," Eddie said firmly, trying to convince herself.
echoed faintly. "And full of protein." The summer sun shone down bright and hot on the pond. Shimmering heat waves rose up all around the cabin. Bees bumbled in the weed flowers that were thigh-high in the yard. "I was wondering, Eddie," I said between hastily swallowed bites, "if we maybe shouldn't rent a power tiller for the garden down at the hardware store." The garden we had so carefully planted was now overrun with weeds. We had to do something quick either get rid of the "Delicious,"
I
—
weeds, or get used to them in lieu of tomatoes.
"Are you kidding?
A
power
tiller?
don't actually want to patronize an
Are you out of your mind? You
economy
interchangeable cogs in some vast assembly possibly
want
The People into do you? You couldn't
that turns line,
makes medical mean, that's why
to participate in a system of production that
one hand and bombs with the other. I we're up here, isn't it, to wean ourselves from that sort of hypocrisy, supplies with
become honest I
mont.
working-class people? Well,
said nothing. I
I
my
reviewed
wasn't at
isn't it?"
sure that that was
all
motives and concluded that
why I
Once
I
was
in
Ver-
I
wanted
to be
was shamelessly allowing myself to be defined was afraid it would sound at best hopelessly bougie
again
by another person.
I
was mostly here
because Eddie wanted to be, for reasons of her own, and with Eddie.
to
I
(Eddie's shorthand for "bourgeois")
revolutionary at worst. So instead
I
if I
admitted
this
— and
counter-
asked meekly, "Yes, but what about
the weeds?"
them by hand," Eddie announced the Third World does!"
"We'll pull
person in
grandly, "like every
Lisa Alther
513
That afternoon, shirtless, sweat pouring out of our hairy armpits, we pulled weeds in the hot sun for about fifteen minutes, clearing a small corner of the tomato patch. Our bodies clammy with sweat, we lay under an apple tree and smoked a joint. "If
tomatoes can't prevail against the weeds, they don't deserve to
Eddie concluded. "To pull the weeds would be to weaken the tomatoes and make them dependent on us." live,"
"Maybe to
too
it's
late.
think they're already corrupted.
I
They appear
need us."
The we had
apples hanging above us were tinged with pink.
Because
prune the trees or to control the insects, they were tiny and deformed and riddled with worm holes. We turned over on our stomachs so that we wouldn't have to look at yet another tribute to our failed to
ineptitude.
"We may
not be freeing up our former food supplies for shipment
Third World,"
to the
I
said,
"but we're sure providing one hell of a feast
for the area insects."
When amusing,
"We're
it
just
Eddie looked
at
me,
had been reactionary. picking up on all this
knew that my remark hadn't been "What do you expect?" she demanded. I
soil shit.
We'll get
together for next
it
summer."
We passed the joint and became less and less glum. We glanced off and on
at the
honey.
We
beehive under a neighboring
had
left
tree.
At
least
we would have
the bees almost entirely alone, in keeping with our
Only the bees had come regime. They were rushing in and out with loads of
policy of letting things fend for themselves.
through under
this
nectar and pollen. Talk about accountant mentalities.
"We
my
should do more hives next year," Eddie
said,
.
.
.
yawning. "That's
kind of project." She rolled over and wrapped her arms around
me
and nibbled my neck. Eddie and I went one day to Mona's and Atheliah's for an autumnal equinox party. The plan was that we would all help them harvest their crops, and then we would have a big feed. I took soybean croquettes Creole as our contribution. When we arrived at their crumbling farmhouse, a dozen people in various stages of undress were lolling around
weed patch
was their front lawn. I recognized about half the people as being in Mona's and Atheliah's group. The others were from nearby farms. Marijuana smoke hung around the group like a London pea-soup fog. A woman in a long Indian shirt with hair to her waist was in the
that
plucking a dulcimer and singing a Kentucky coal mining song with a
hope when I'm gone and the ages shall roll,/ My blacken and turn into coal./ Then I'll look from the door of my
Brooklyn accent:
body
will
"I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
514
And pity the miner digging my bones/ Where it's dark as a dungeon, damp as the dew,/ Where the danger is double, the pleasures are few,/ Where the rain never falls and the sun never shines/ It's dark as a dungeon way down in the mines." I felt a passing seizure of nostalgia
heavenly home/
The
had never known. Genes, no doubt. forebears encoded within each of my
mines of Appalachia that
for the
collective experience of
I
my
cells.
A
shirtless
man
with a Simon Legree mustache was silk-screening
"Power
to the People" in white
stirring
something
fire.
A
for his
to
on
his
dark blue T-shirt. Atheliah was
naked boy baby was tottering around with mother,
Mona, who
middle of a small
in a big cast iron pot that sat in the
whom lifted
he couldn't
the
lid
and
locate.
sniffed
I
and
his
handed said,
arms outstretched
my
earthenware dish
"Soybeans. Far out."
After a while a few people wandered out to the corn patch, which
was almost
woman
as full of
weeds
as
our tomato patch. Eddie
sat
down
next to
went out to the corn patch to help pick. We ripped the ears off the stalks, shucked them, and tossed them in a cart. They were mostly four inches long and etched with brown worm tracks. Halfway through the patch, Laverne, a woman in Mona's house, found a stunted Hubbard squash that was about the size and shape of a small football. Laverne was statuesque. There was no other word for her. Her shapely hips and large breasts strained the seams of her T-shirt and jeans. She had long blond naturally curly hair and blue eyes. In another era she would have been a movie starlet, a model for Rubens. She held the
with the dulcimer and started harmonizing.
I
up her squash triumphantly. "A football!" gasped a bearded man with blear>- e>es, who looked like Sherman on his march through Georgia. He grabbed the squash, faded back, and passed it to another man, who wore nothing but jeans, which were too large for him and were bunched together and held up with a belt fashioned from a silk rep tie. "Keep-away," he suggested. "Shirts against the skins." We glanced around. Five of us wore shirts; three men were shirtless. Laverne threw off her T-shirt with one smooth upward movement. "HI be a skin!" Ever\'one stood transfixed, staring with awe at her magnificent brown breasts, which were very tanned and evidently accustomed to exposure. Trying to pretend that we hadn't been staring, that we all saw bare bosoms this breathtaking every day, that the female chest was no big deal to people as sexually liberated as we, we began a frantic game of
Lisa Alther
515
keep-away through the corn patch, trampling the juicy green
we
passing and handing off the squash as
stalks
and
went. Everyone was clandes-
tinely sneaking glimpses of Laverne's breasts,
bouncing firmly
as she ran
and gleaming bronze under the September sun. The game got progressively rougher, and soon people were tackling each other and grappling in the dirt, over the squash. At one point I lay
my
trying to catch
breath after a savage tackle by General Sherman. As
saw that the game had moved from the garden and into the high grass. Laverne, her jeans hanging on her hips just above her pubic hair, was dancing in place signaling to the man with the tie I
picked myself up,
belt to
I
throw her the squash. Her arms were raised high over her head,
accentuating the narrowness of her waist. Her breasts were shaking in place like Jell-O.
The squash was it.
As she
did, she
sailed over
flying
was
hit
through the
from three
air.
sides
by male
her head and smashed open, spilling
Laverne herself landed on her back
grass.
Laverne leapt up to catch
The squash
tacklers.
its
orange guts on the
in the dirt with
her jeans to
her knees.
watched
I
and
in
amazement
as the
bearded
started lunging his hips into hers.
Shortly,
he
rolled off
and another
I
man
man
threw himself on her
heard her gasping and shrieking.
climbed on,
like a
cowboy
trying
to ride a bronco.
glanced back toward the house.
I
ferently.
No one seemed
A couple
of people watched indif-
concerned. But from where
I
stood, with
my
mouth hanging open, it looked for all the world like what Clem used call a gang bang. They were like a pack of mongrels balling a bitch heat.
Laverne was being raped and no one was helping!
speculating that she had perhaps been asking for
I
to in
ran closer,
it.
By the time I was ten yards away, I could see that her legs were sprawled open and her whole luscious body was smeared with dirt and sweat and semen. I could also hear what she was screaming: "Faster! Faster! Don't stop now, you mother fucker! Oh mother of Christ! Don't stopr Her body was arcing up off the ground and twitching spasmodically, like a frog's leg hooked into an electric current. Three men lay in panting heaps next to her, I I
like
bees after stinging.
stopped running to her assistance and stood frozen to the spot. As
watched, blood rushed to
my
face.
My
nipples began tingling with
wanted to join the fray, but whether on top of Laverne or underneath the men I was no longer certain. Divided excitement.
loyalties.
I
realized
I
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
5l6 I
turned around and walked slowly back toward the house, breath-
ing deeply to quell I
sat
down
Mona was
my
beast.
next to Eddie,
who was
scowling.
".
really disgusting,"
.
.
I
said nothing.
saying.
"Revolting," Eddie agreed, looking at me. But
Later Eddie and
I
passed by Atheliah's cast iron pot and got a bowl
of soup. "Dr. Dekleine's Victory Soup," Atheliah informed us. "Brewer's yeast,
powdered
milk,
and toasted soy
flour. Delicious.
And packed
with
protein."
We
on the
sat
steps,
and Eddie
said casually,
"You
liked
it,
didn't
you? "Liked what?" "Laverne's charming
number
corn patch."
in the
"Oh, that." "I saw you standing there watching and getting off on "I
thought they were raping her.
"You
I
it."
was worried."
don't need to worry about Laverne.
It's
you I'm worried
about."
"Me?" "Admit
it.
You
loved
it.
You wanted
to
be right in there with them.
Didn't you?"
occurred to me."
"It
"I
knew
You're tired of me!"
it!
"I'm not,"
assured her without conviction.
I
"Can I help it if I don't have a penis?" "Of course not," I said wearily. "I've told you to a
me. There are
all sorts
that
it
doesn't matter
of compensations to being with you instead of
man." "Compensations? Compensations?
of those young studs on his
dare you
to!
You'll
"Maybe
I
come
will."
ested in the idea
all
macho
trip
Go ahead,
Go drag one
out into the woods with you!
crawling back to
Under
Scarlett.
me
Eddie's abuse,
I
in minutes!
Go
I
on!"
was becoming more
inter-
the time.
That night we walked back to our cabin in an icy silence, me with the crusted soybean croquette dish under my arm. We climbed into bed and turned our backs on each other. Later that night I woke up being caressed by Eddie. Warm tears were dripping from her eyes and onto my bare chest. "Don't leave me, Ginny. Please don't. I couldn't stand it if I knew you were with a man. I get sick just thinking about it. Don't do it to us." Reflexively, I took her in my arms, and we kissed and held each
Lisa Alther
other.
She parted
orgasm,
I
back and
and
felt
my
517
knees and began stroking me.
something hard and cold
slide into
On
me and
the verge of start
forth. It felt fantastic. Curiosity finally quelling lust,
"What
you doing, Eddie?" I turned on the light. She smiled sheepishly and held up a greased cucumber.
said,
her with horror.
moving I sat up
are
"It's all right,"
she assured me.
"It's
I
looked at
organically grown."
Lynn Caraganis AMERICA'S CUP '83: THE SHERPA CHALLENGE
am
and we have received our share of drubbings from the Americans over this Cup. Of course, it meant little or nothing to us the year they took it from us: more a gesture on our part than anything else a means, really, of encouraging sporting ideals in a pushing, ignoI
a Briton, yes,
—
rant people, giving
them the
incentive to raise themselves. This has
way of our dealings with ex-colonials. Let the poor devils see what we have and how we do it. Let 'em aspire! Then they'll drop their tribes and whatnot, and you'll get your loyalty, by God. But that's all past now. So much so, in fact, that my friends at the New York Yacht Club have asked me to compile these unpretentious "notes" on the current challenge and I have promised to do so in a fair, always been the
nonpartisan
spirit.
SEPTEMBER QTH: Yes, like so
menacing
many
fact;
things,
even as
sparkling waters of
what once appeared I
write these words,
Newport Harbor
Kathmandu. Since her
arrival
days ago), she has hoisted no yards from the piers. ashore.
were forced
am
is
now
squinting across the
at the indescribable challenger
from
during the night of September 5th (four
nor approached any nearer than 500 Nor has any member of the foreign crew come sail,
vessel,
but a dense fog closed in rather suddenly, and they
to return.
Committee members do
report that whole families
and that goats and chickens run freely around the myself can see the smoke from at least two open-air cooking fires.
are living I
I
be a pathetic joke
Yesterday the launch of the Measurement Committees ap-
proached the
deck.
to
on the
boat,
Lynn Caraganis
519
SEFI EMBER lOTH:
Somehow
or other, the question of the
measurements has been waived,
and though no representative of the challenging boat has so much as replied to our luncheon and cocktail invitations, the races begin at 1 p.m. the day after tomorrow. A note on the challenger: According to the American, or "Universal," rule of rating /L +
2D + VS - F \
which
is
deemed
/'
2.37
\
very complicated, this Nepalese craft, though eccentric,
is
and may compete under the rules. Indeed, if looks were everything, the fellows on our side might not be losing any sleep. For example, according to Measurement Comto be a legally proportioned 12-metre,
members who did get near before the fog closed in, the Sherpa boatwrights have made no effort at all to trim the shaggy goatskin hull! Florrie Wentworth said it looked like "a bunch of people adrift in a goodsized wig." As for the Sherpas themselves, she claims that they bowed and waved politely before the fog hid them from view. She further claims mittee
that their "complexions are marvellous!"
Moreover, no winches or hard-
ware of any kind were seen except some wicker characteristic of these races
word
— that we should be forced
Wentworth
that Florrie
Westerner could swear to so
modore he
is
cleats. (It
utters at a time like
much
Cup
it
painful
was hung
all
— but
hang on every this.) Further, no to
as the color of their sails!
did notice that they have a sort of "Park
not absolutely sure, as
is
The Com-
Avenue boom," though
over with
bits
of bright cotton.
commonly won and lost by very small margins, the quality (or absence!) of a winch may be of no small significance. (There is some suspicion that they may have mounted the winches belowdecks the innovation that gave Intrepid such good results.) But we old hands are more than baffled. Park Avenue boom or no Park Avenue As
races are
—
boom.
SEPTEMBER llTH First,
I
— THE MOOD AMONG OUR FELLOWS:
have been receiving a good deal of unfair ribbing around
here for a remark
I
made
in print
some time
ago, to the effect that
many
would be a good thing for the Cup to cross "the pond" (for, as you know, once won by them the Cup has not been retaken). This present kind of thing is not what I meant. No one, no one would be sorrier than I to see the Cup go to a nation of professional sporting Americans
porters.
felt it
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
520
Now
must relate a peculiar incident, whether true or not, just as I heard it from the chattering lips of a local Newport boy. As is only natural, there is enormous curiosity as to the lines of the challenger's hull. The suspense became too great for one of our members, and he persuaded this youth in strictest secrecy to swim underwater and take a look, in return for a college education. To this the boy agreed, and he swam out there around midday. He claims that when he was not 50 yards from the boat, he saw below him a great looming black shape and, terrified, swam away as fast as he could. Several of our fellows were standing on the dock when he appeared thrashing on the surface, and I
—
—
the story has unfortunately got round.
Our
fellows are understandably
sobered by the whole business.
Needless to say, the Committee refuses to pursue the matter basis of
what
this local
ori
the
boy thinks he saw.
WEARING THE WRONG SHOES:
One
of our
members has now
left
Newport
altogether.
He was
apparently tormented by the old prophecy about the team that takes the
Cup
having the wrong shoes.
He
heard Florrie say these Sherpas were
wearing "some kind of wog wedgie," and he instantly packed up and returned to the to
an
city.
earlier day,
This attitude
is
widely regarded as
and we are resolved
more appropriate
to await the verdict of the fair
competition.
10 P.M.
I
had
"the head of THE SKIPPER WILL REPLACE THE CUP IN ITS VENERABLE GLASS CASE":
a disturbing talk this evening with Skipper
Beef Wentworth.
Beef has more 12-metre experience than any other man on this side of "the pond." We have known each other for many years, and I have never seen him so ill at ease. Beef is famous for giving over the last 36 hours before any race to what he
calls
"pure drinking," for drinking during the
Today he
round sadly. I told him I believe he has trained his fine crew well, and his Groton Academy is a fine boat. He has nothing to reproach himself for should he lose, which hardly seems likely. But he sobbed and only said, "It's fine. It's race,
and
for going
on
to win.
just looks
lose, Bobby." But I feel we shall Meanwhile, Ed Stevens, aggressive yachtsman and head of the Groton Academy syndicate, has been haunting the fishing shanties and public meeting places of the local people of Newport, who, he has always fine.
.
.
.
Lynn Caraganis maintained, can be very shrewd
have noticed myself that their sive.
you can once gain their confidence. I knowledge of local conditions is impresif
According to Stevens, the young
there the other day has since lost
connection, or whether tions
this
is
521
all
man who his hair.
got such a scare out
Whether there
is
any
merely a consequence of the poor condi-
under which such people
live
—
diet
and so on
— would be
difficult
to say.
Well, this
is
without a doubt the strangest America's
have ever been involved
in,
and
I
Cup
contest
I
go back to 1958, the year Sceptre gave And by the way, Sceptre was not the
Columbia such a hard time of it. joke the U.S. media tried to make out. '58 was a summer of irresponsible winds and sullen swells a very injurious type of racing weather by any international yachting standards. No acknowledgment of this was ever made in the American papers. However, this is a time when we must
—
stand together, not carp.
THE MEDIA GET INTO
A
IT:
popular U.S. tabloid has issued a supplement on the Sherpas
("We Aim
Nothing Less Than the Overthrow of the American Way of Life"), claiming to have interviewed several crew members by telephone. Incredibly, the Americans seem to believe this patent nonsense and are terrified by it, and these papers are now almost impossible to get. What follows is a representative sample of what is passing as truth in this once idyllic
at
town:
Q: Are you related to anyone in
this
country?
Sherpa: Yes, Brooke Shields.
Another Sherpa: And we
practice
voodoo
SEPTEMBER 12TH I
don't
know when
burn and
I
rites.
— THE FIRST RACE:
have seen such tense holiday crowds. Jack Wedderwere discussing it just this morning. He related to me a I
conversation he overheard between his hostess, a famous Newport dow-
and her colored maidservant, who reportedly said, "I just say, they win or they lose, you're still the richest lady in Newport." And her mistress replied, "There is more to life than money, Trixie." To which Trixie murmured, "Give me some, then, old lady." Low comedy aside, Newport is a worried town, as evidenced by this trivial rhyme, which I heard in the Teacup as I was having my breakfast: ager,
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
522
Oh, Nepal has
And
a
got a nice boat
crew of Sherpa heroes,
But well buy 'em off with tobacco, Bic lighters, and nice
little
mirrors.
Conditions are optimal for Groton Academy,
I
am happy
be counting heavily on her noted windward
to say.
and the stiff breeze should hearten all the fellows. Whether the unknown Himalayan designer counted on such weather is of course a myster\', and of course very little is known about offshore conditions over there. There is the usual violent chop on the course, owing to the spectator fleet, Beef
will
which
estimated at
IS
—
5
abilities,
million vessels, being restrained with great
— by the
diffi-
and helicopters of the Coast Guard. In a magnanimous gesture, the great motor yacht Frank Sinatra has offered cult)
as usual
the services of
its
ships
Wyoming,
the U.S.S.
escort,
to
help patrol the
course.
Groton Academy and Non-Aligned Sherpa Maid are now circling majestically behind the line in anticipation of the starting gun. I will take
—
moment here to describe at last the challenger's sails objects of so much speculation until now. According to the most recent press release, they are woven of the hair of the yak. To Western eyes, they present a a
—
most peculiar appearance, almost that of some type of what is it? macrame! I would estimate the jib alone weighs two or three tons. What a contrast to the very flat Kevlar set of the
The seconds a small
Sherpa
engaged
in
Academy
are ticking away, and
woman
I
handsome defender! can see through
my binoculars
actually lounging with her back against the mast,
some kind of clapping game with
a small child!
Yet on Groton
the good-looking, brawny, identically dressed crew, schooled
by a thousand
drills,
are working their boat as
if
their lives
depended on
What can be the outcome of such a race? The starting gun! A cry goes up from the spectator throng, and Groton Academy crosses the line in the advantageous lee position. Nonit!
Aligned Maid has hoisted her protest to do,
— which she has no business
even though our fellows ha\e apparently crossed too soon. They
are being recalled. This I
flag!
onh hope
it
will
is
a
most unfortunate way
to begin a
Cup
series.
not weigh too heavily with Skipper Wentworth.
Non-Aligned Maid is clauing her uay ver\- fast to windward now as Groton Academy approaches the line. What! Beef and the boys are setting their red half-oz.
spinnaker
—
a ver>-
odd choice,
surely, for this
windward part of the course.
The
challenger
is
nearing the
first
mark. But instead of rounding,
Lynn Caraganis she has the
come up
523
into the wind, sails flapping,
Committee Boat
are absolutely speechless!
—
and
stalled.
We
— perhaps there
here on is
some
problem with those wicker cleats! and there is a surge of hope in all our hearts as Groton Academy bears down upon her, as fast as her spinnaker
What
The Sherpas
will
permit.
flag
with what seems to be a portrait of Sir
effrontery!
up an immense
are running
Edmund
Hillary with a
mustache insultingly painted on. Oh, this is an outrage! Now she heels and rounds the mark. She is 1:20 ahead. Groton Academy is now following her round, but our
mood
is
solemn, for our boat
is
not so strong on
the reach.
4 P.M.: Non-Aligned Sherpa Maid has finished 5 minutes ahead of the defender. It is a distressing beginning, but of course the challenger
must win three more races to take the Cup. In the evening I encourage the stunned crew of Groton Academy to give the victors three cheers. This they graciously do, but
whether the sound carries out in the harbor, turning like a great sullen bear.
it is
doubtful
monstrous craft now moored far face away from the decent town of Newport
as far as the its
Certainly there
is
no answering cheer.
SEPTEMBER 13TH: There has been a crisis. This morning a curious bean can with a Russian label washed ashore at the Teacup, and the Race Committee has started an immediate inquiry, calling a lay day to do so. Whether it fell off a passing liner or was merely dropped by a tourist, this Russian tin can has brought that "looming dark shape" ominously to the minds of all responsible
yachtsmen. In the meantime, Beef and the crew have closeted themselves at
the Breakers to talk strategy. In this frustrating interim, hundreds of
making nuisances of themselves round the town, and the Teacup is crowded to capacity. Unfortunately, the weather has also closed in, further dampening the spirits of all concerned. I passed by the Teacup on my way to consult with Beef a moment ago and heard the thunderous chanting of those perhaps overclever newspapermen, who, in the absence of real information, apparently cannot resist making something up. Against my will I heard the following verse to their infernal song, which I set down here with my apologies: journalists are
Oh, the Sherpas have
And
sailed over the sea to find us.
Who cares The
built a 12-metre
if
we
can't
even beat her?
Security Council's behind us.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
524
Meanwhile,
Non-Aligned Sherpa Maid may her mooring, and I can hear an eerie
in the intervals of fog,
be dimly seen, placidly swinging
at
ethnic clapping out there.
SEPTEMBER 14TH: been advised by the Commodore that frogmen from the Frank Sinatra have discovered a large Soviet submarine on the bottom of the harbor, not half a mile from the town docks. It is widely believed that this submarine accompanied Non-Aligned Maid to these shores and actually towed her round the course. Do they call that non-alignment? The Race Committee is understandably outraged. I
have
just
"let the frank SINATRA
Some
BOAT!":
of the wags are actually taking pleasure in this shameless breach
of tradition. But knowledgeable sailing ing the help she had, Non-Aligned
word
TOW OUR
is
men
Maid
are heartened that, consider-
did not do so very well.
The
going round that the owners of the powerful motor yacht Frank
Groton Academy in an "exhibition race" against Non-Aligned Maid and her "friend." All this old sailor can say to that is: whatever the outcome of such a race, it would be a sad departure from America's Cup tradition. (If this be elitism, so be it.) Besides, it is a well-known fact that the Frank Sinatra is escorted everywhere by the U.S.S. Wyoming; does no one consider the possible consequences of bringing such a vessel into competition, however indirect, with a nuclear submarine from Russia? Sinatra have offered to tow
To such
people, however, the possibility of a grave international
and the damage
would do to the reputation of these races, is apparently nothing more than an amusing joke. If the Race Committee takes my advice, they will close these races immediincident, even war,
it
ately.
6 P.M. I
now
set
down
in
its
— OUR COMMODORE
entirety the
Commodore's statement
as
it
was
just
given to the press:
We
feel
it
would be
in the interest of the
vessels to instantly depart for their
seeing to that now.
If this
whole world
for
homelands, and the U.S.S.
America's
Cup
all
foreign
Wyoming
challenge has done
little
is
to
Lynn Caraganis
525
promote international forgiveness, it has done no [Cries of "Yes it has!" from the crowd]
And perhaps tural, after all,
the ethical differences
and not the
guffaws, and cries of
As always, the
New York
As the crowd began
harm,
a drink.
Yacht Club
Thank
will
either.
noticed are merely cul-
results of race or political system.
"Come on and have
lenges from foreign clubs.
we have
lasting
[Jeering,
Commodore"] consider legitimate chal-
you, everybody.
and the cheering died away, a waggish voice cried, "Challenge, here, from JMongolia!" The Commodore, who was just climbing down from the platform, looked very grave. Then more guffaws broke out, and he and Beef Wentworth were borne away for some "pure drinking." And so these unorthodox races were concluded, at least, in the fitting and traditional manner the manner in which we also conclude races on the other side of "the pond." I mean with a drink. Third World and Communist countries may have their own way. To them, the end of to disperse
—
a race
may
mountain
signal a night of spying, or round-the-clock sacrifices to hairy
gods.
Fran Lebowitz NOTES ON
trick, n.
deceit;
from OFr.
It.
trickier, to trick, to cheat; Pr.
treeeare, to cheat,
signed to deceive, swindle, stratagem; deception.
art,
.
.
.
an action or device de-
i.
dodge; ruse;
etc.; artifice; a
(b)
4.
(a)
any
a clever or difficult act
feat requiring
skill.
5.
the
method, or process of doing something successfully
or of getting a result quickly ...
vention of an
nerism
I
trie,
a practical joke; a mischievous
2.
or playful act; prank ...
intended to amuse
''TRICK"
.
have chosen these
.
art, craft,
6.
an expedient or con-
or trade ...
7.
man-
a personal
.
definitions, carefully selected
from the Unabridged
Second Edition of Webster's Dictionan. on the basis of congeniality with what is perhaps the most current usage of the word Trick that which refers to the object of one's affectations. By "one" I mean the person of serious ambition in those fields most likely to necessitate the employment of a press agent. Such a person is often, but not always, a homosexual; ,
—
the primary reason for this being that the heterosexual
dened by
his
own young
to
be
much
interested in
is
anyone
far too bur-
else's.
Where
the heterosexual feels a sense of duty, a sense of honor, a sense of responsibility, the
homosexual
feels a
sense of humor, a sense of proto-
and most significantly, a sense of design. With no dependents, he is free to pursue his selfish interests among these, the Trick. The Trick allows one a semblance of romantic intimacy without the risk that one's own importance will be improperly
col,
appreciated.
The
Trick exhibits those qualities found in a favorite toy. Surely,
Fran Lebowitz
no sane person would
527
he could help it knowingly choose a doll that talked about progressive education and demanded that one share the housework and it is precisely this ability to help it that separates the men from the toys. if
—
Fortunately, there are the
first
many
available to
requirement of the climber
proximity one
is,
is
fill
the role of Trick, since
a toehold. In allowing this close
indeed, apt to have one's pocket picked, but one also
has the option of causing a nasty
spill.
therefore, a situation in
It is,
which everyone concerned can be taken advantage of to the best of his ability. As to the question of who runs the greatest risk of getting hurt, one can only reply that the number of mountains that have suffered severe or fatal injury is infinitesimal when compared to the number who have tackled them. The word Trick is used to describe the less illustrious member of such an alliance and it fills a genuine need. For the noteworthy partner the words Rich and/or Famous are quite sufficient, but the corresponding adjectives of Cute and/or Well-built are somewhat lacking. Actual names were all right for home use, but neither "Juan" nor "Heather" is really serviceable as a generic term.
when
Exactly is
or
why
unclear, although there
prostitutes,
who have
contention
is
the word Trick was is
a theory that
long used
not without logic,
word Trick was spread by simple I
have
we proceed
this
(or
far
more
purpose
While
in regard to their clients.
it is
to
used for
derives from the slang of
likely that this
this
use of the
complex) word of mouth.
in the interest of clarification jotted
subject, but before
be
it
it
first
them there
down some
notes on the
are a few things that
must
said:
Tricks like to
lie
in
bed
—
Tricks should never be
one might
trip
also in restaurants.
left
strewn carelessly about the house where some-
over them.
Tricks are attracted to bright objects. This since you obviously
do not share
These notes are 1.
It is
for
this
may
elude your understanding
tendency.
Lord Alfred Douglas.
wise to avoid the very young Trick. For while
it is
indeed
true that they offer the advantage of having to leave early to get to
same thing can be accomplished by the use of fashion models, who will not only have to be standing on top of the Pan Am Building in full makeup by 8 A.M. but who also will never need help with their term papers on John Donne. school,
it is
equally true that the very
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
528
The homosexuars
2.
desire to remain youthful
entirely based
is
knowledge that he will never have children and hence pri\ed of legitimately meeting their more attractive friends. his
There are those
3.
Trick
is
director
sheer
who
stupidit>-.
for
whom
be de-
the most highly prized qualit>' in a
Of this group
the most envied
has installed in his residence a young
when he watches television. 4. Random examples of items
will
on
is
an eminent film
man whose
lips
move
canon of Trick:
that are part of the
Bennington College's Nonresident Term Conceptual
art
Stealing
Tr>ing on someone
else's leather jacket
while he's at work
Artistic greeting cards
Interesting food
Black sheets
Remembering telephone numbers by makmg a word out of the corresponding letters
Tr>ing to figure things out by listening to the
lyrics
of popular songs
Exotic cigarettes
Reading, or more
likely
watching, Breakfast at Tiffany's and identif\ing
with Holly Golighth"
Hearing about
and thinking you're Zelda
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Being Zelda Fitzgerald and thinking you're F. Scott Lina Wertmuller movies seen without nausea Stag movies seen with lust 5.
A
good Trick,
like a
good
child,
is
mannerly.
He
unless spoken to, he does not contradict, and he kneels
comes
when an
interested as ever in the young,
confidential undertone, glancing
shoulders to where Daniel stood.
your
.
I
see," Francis
remarked
round the obstruction of .
.
"You
old succubus! Let's have a look
latest suffix!
— The Apes of God,
Mixed company
Tricks are present.
in a
his friend's
Wyndham 6.
adult
into the room.
"Still as
at
does not speak
in the
modern sense of
the term
How often one has longed to be left alone
Lewis
means after
that
dinner
while the Tricks go upstairs and take cocaine. 7.
Trick.
American
The market
such products
industr\- has is
made
a grave error in overlooking the
wide open and would be rewardingly recepti\e to
as strawberr\-swirl \odka,
cigarettes with a secret surprise inside.
Hermes
mittens, and a pack of
Fran Lebowitz
52g
Although the male Trick is more prone to stealing than is the female, neither sex can be trusted alone in the same room with an 8.
invitation to a party at Halston's. 9.
Tricks have feelings too, as they will be the
first
to
tell
you.
If
— —
you prick them they do indeed bleed usually your good vodka. 10. The Trick is, when it comes to finance, truly a child of the modern age, for he never carries cash at least not his own. 11. Other people's Tricks pose a special problem. Upon coming across a friend thus accompanied you must, out of politeness, treat the Trick amicably. This
is
invariably a mistake, for shortly thereafter the
and for the rest of your parties and saying hello.
friend will divest himself of his consort
the Trick will be coming 12.
The
to
you
simple black Trick
events where food 13.
up
It is
is
at is
—
particularly at
not served.
not unusual for the male aficionado to draw his Tricks
exclusively from the lower orders.
this
group
"Horace has always been
replied,
like that
Such
When
tracted to the criminal element.
spokesman for under arrest."
always appropriate
life
—
a person
is,
indeed, often at-
asked wherein lay the appeal, a
"Everybody looks good when they're
his intentions
honourable" sneered Ratner "and he has never
have always been
strictly
lost his belief in 'genius'
associated always with extreme youth, and a pretty face! Unfortunately,
the type of beauty which appeals to Horace you see
The It
Horace has never actually met with might have opened his eyes if he had!" result
is
is
rather
a 'genius,'
commonplace. which is a pity.
—The Apes of God, Wyndham Lewis
Should you be awakened in the middle of the night by a faint scratching sound, do not fear for your health unless you are certain that all valuables have been safely locked away. For it is far less likely that your Trick is suffering a communicable rash than that he is copying out your address book. The more vindictive among you may be interested in devising a phony version of said book in which you have carefully set 14.
down
the
phone numbers of particularly
vile ex-Tricks
next to the
names
of your most prestigious and least favorite former employers. 15.
upon the 16.
The mistreatment
of Tricks
is
the revenge of the intelligent
beautiful.
Regrettably few Tricks are attractive enough to be allowed to
Only those possessed of truly incredicheekbones should ever be permitted to use the word energy in a
discuss their innermost thoughts. ble
sentence unless they are referring to heating
oil.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
53©
make
17.
The
18.
Occasionally a Trick
Trick
is
not an equal but he
the transition to person.
will
often an equalizer.
is
succeed so spectacularly that he
When
this
occurs he
amazing imperiousness of manner. People love
will
assume
will
a truly
to feel superior to their
past.
Tricks almost always have pets. This
19.
everyone needs someone they can
talk to
on
Taking an emergency telephone
20.
Heather
is
their
call
understandable, as
own
level.
from a Dr. Juan or a Dr.
certain to result in overinvolvement.
There
21.
is
is
a distinct Trick taste in literature.
Among favorite Trick
books are those dealing with the quest for God, such Carlos Castaneda and
Hermann
as the
Hesse; those depicting a glamorous and
torturous homosexuality, as in the case of Nightwood by
and those assuring Tricks that everything them. This
sort of reading
is
works of
is
fine
Djuna Barnes;
and dandy, especially
generally harmless providing they have
mastered the technique of reading quietly to themselves. For even the
most hopelessly smitten will bridle at being awakened by Anais Nin. 22. When it comes to the visual arts a marked Trick preference also evident.
Trick
is
make
it
Work
that
into this category
falls
unfailingly attracted to that
is
is
easy to recognize, as the
which looks
as
if
he could
(or did)
himself.
23.
Art movies on television are ideal for luring the reluctant Trick
There are very few people who dabble in this field who have not seen the first twenty minutes of Loves of a Blonde more to one's apartment.
times than they care to count.
The
drawn to the interesting job. Interesting jobs, in this sense, include not only work in museum gift shops but also minor positions on the production crews of documentary films con24.
Trick
is,
without
fail,
cerning birth defects. 25.
bent for
The
Trick,
creativity.
more
The
often than not, will display an unconquerable
East Coast Trick leans heavily toward the com-
West Coast counterpart goes in for songwriting. Tricks of all regions own expensive cameras with which they take swaggeringly grainy photographs of nearby planets and sensitive young drug addicts. This is not difficult to understand, as they are relentless admirers of that which they call art and you call hobbies. position of free-verse poetry, while his
"Can't you see
your 'genius'
Dan
that
you are Horace's plaything
— pulling your —
pull other people's legs
leg
when
that's to get
your
— When he
'genius'!
talks
about
People always
they want to get hold of their genius!"
—The Apes of God, Wyndham Lewis
Fran Lebowitz 26.
27.
531
One man's Trick is another man's design assistant. A New York hostess with a penchant for young
boys gave a
which a kind and fatherly magazine editor found himself seated across from her Trick. Seeking to put the boy at ease, the editor asked him politely what he did. "I'm an alchemist," the boy replied. Overhearing the exchange, another guest whispered, "Alchemist? They used to be bank clerks." 28. There is occasionally some question as to which member of a given duo is the Trick. This sort of confusion results when one (the elder) has money and the other (the younger) has talent. In such cases, and with all due respect to rising young luminaries, unless the money is exceedingly new and the talent exceedingly large, the money, as is its wont, wins. Or as was once said to a somewhat braggardly young artist while window-shopping at Porthaults, "If she has those sheets, you're the dinner
at
Trick." 29. Tricks like
you
what they
for
you haven't. 30. If one half of the couple
is
aren't.
You
like
Tricks for what
a waiter or waitress,
he or she
is
always the Trick. Particularly, or in the case of New York City inevitably, if
he or she has
artistic
Such
ambitions.
individuals
with those that they in turn refer to as Tricks, but that far
may is
indeed
traffic
a level of society
too submerged to be of any interest.
At public gatherings Tricks have been observed speaking to one another. What they actually say can only be a matter of conjecture but it is safe to assume that no money is changing hands. 32. The female Trick of great beauty can be readily identified by 31.
her habit of putting a cigarette in her assurance that someone else 33.
It
might appear
will light
mouth
with an attitude of absolute
it.
to the casual observer that wives are Tricks.
This betrays a sorry lack of perception, since no word as innately hearted as Trick could ever be used to describe someone with
light-
whom
you
share a joint checking account. 34. It
is
not good form to take a Trick out unless one
established as to be able to afford being associated with
might
at
35.
any given
moment
write a
poem
Tricks are often plenteous
is
so firmly
someone who
in public.
gift givers.
Upon
receiving such of-
one does well to forget old adages, for while it may certainly be true that good things come in small packages it must not be forgotten ferings,
that this 36.
these
is
also the case with
from female Tricks are immediately recognizable, as are greatly inclined to cross their sevens and dot their z's with
Letters
girls
ceramic jewelry.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
532 little
circles.
In
all
probability this
is
caused by their associating the
presence of a writing implement in their hand with the playing of tic-tactoe.
"There
is
a
Talmudic saying," smiled Dr. Frumpfausen
choosing a friend, ascend a
step. In
Froggie-would-a-wooing-go,
when
step last!
down,
as
many
.
.
.
"as follows. In
choosing a wife, descend a Froggie
is
my
you,
steps as there are beneath
..."
step.
When
dear boy, he must
—even unto the —The Apes of God,
him
Wyndham Lewis 37.
Tricks are distinctly susceptible to the allure of faraway places.
you reside in the Village they want to breakfast at the Plaza. If you live in Murray Hill it's Chinatown they long for. But no matter where you make your home, they all share a consuming desire to ride, in the middle If
of the night, the Staten Island Ferry.
They
will,
without exception, con-
your rejection of such a proposal cold and unfeeling, little realizing that you are simply protecting them from what you knovv- \\ould be overwhelming temptation were you ever to find yourself standing behind sider
them on
a
moving
boat.
Ian Frazier DATING YOUR
MOM
where people meet and
In today's fast-moving, transient, rootless society,
make
love and part without ever really touching, the relationship every
guy already has with
his
own mother
woman
grown, experienced, loving
too valuable to ignore. Here
is
— one you do
is
a
not have to go to a
one you do not have to go to great lengths to get to know. There are hundreds of times when you and your mother are thrown together naturally, without the tension that usually accomjust the two of you, alone. All you need is a little panies courtship
party or a singles bar to meet,
—
presence of mind to take advantage of these situations. Say your find a nice station
pleasant
conditioner on max. say something like,
don't think
bring you say,
she'll tell
Then
—
humming along the pavement,
socks.
really kept
Or suppose
"Dear, Piper just
tell
made
I
I've
a pass at
is
try
intention
lem
is
is
bet you'll be surprised at
how
easy
the main thing: you have to want
that lots of people get
hung up on
it
to
her close, and
it
hard to say,
to herself until the
is
it I'll
room
secretly flattered,
no longer ashamed to tell the world of your Dating your mother seriously might seem difficult
you
and
can guarantee you one
me," or possibly she it
Mom,
ever met." Probably
your dad. Possibly she would find
but, whatever the reason, she will keep
when she
wrist, pull
woman
to cut out the foolishness, but
thing: she will never
your shape.
she comes into your
Take her by the
you're the most fascinating
you
air-
turn to look at her across the front seat and
haven't noticed."
I
tires
"You know, you've
some clean
"Mom,
in the car to
of freeway driving
lull
is
buy you a new pair of slacks. First, on the car radio, one that she likes. Get into the
downtown
driving you
mom
it is.
day comes
love. at first,
but once
Facing up to your
bad enough.
One
prob-
feelings of guilt about their dad.
THE BEST OF MODERN HUMOR
534
They
think,
and whittle
Oh, here's this kindly and dynamite fish I
—
who
old guy can't let
taught
him go on
me how
hunt
to
into his twilight
years alone. Well, there are two reasons you can dismiss those thoughts
from your mind. First, every woman, I don't care who she is, prefers her son to her husband. That is a simple fact; ask any woman who has a son,
and
admit
she'll
much
it.
like herself,
And why shouldn't she prefer someone who is so who represents nine months of special concern and
love and intense physical closeness
— someone whom she actually
more women begin to express the need own in the world, more women are going
cre-
ated? As
to
their
to start being honest
have something
all
you and your mom begin going together, you will simply become part of a natural and inevitable historical trend. Second, you must remember this about your dad: you have your mother, he has his! Let him go put the moves on his own mother and stop messing with yours. If his mother is dead or too old to be much fun anymore, that's not your fault, is it? It's not your fault that he didn't realize his mom for the woman she was, before it was too late. Probably he's going to try a lot of emotional blackmail on you just because you had a good idea and he never did. Don't buy it. Comfort yourself with the thought that your dad belongs to the last generation of guys who will let their moms slip away from them like that. Once your dad is out of the picture once he has taken up flyand tying, joined the Single Again Club, moved to Russia, whatever your mom has been wooed and won, if you're anything like me you're going to start having so much fun that the good times you had with your mother when you were little will seem tame by comparison. For a while. Mom and I went along living a contented, quiet life, just happy to be with each other. But after several months we started getting into some about
this preference.
When
—
different things, like the big motorized stroller.
time
Mom
steered
me down
the street!
On
Big Jim doll and the wire with the colored
The
thrill
I
felt
the
first
the tray, in addition to
wooden
beads,
I
have
my
my desk
an in-out basket, and my name plate. I get a lot of work done, plus I get a great chance to people-watch. Then there's my big, adult-sized highchair, where I sit in the evening as Mom and I
blotter,
my
—
typewriter,
watch the news and discuss current events, while
I
paddle in
my
food
and throw my dishes on the floor. When Mom reaches to wipe off my chin and I take her hand, and we fall to the floor in a heap me, Mom, highchair, and all well, those are the best times, those are the very best
—
—
times. It is
things
I
true that occasionally
know
I
cannot have,
I
find myself longing for
like
even more
—
for
the feel of a firm, strong, gentle hand
Ian Frazier at
535
my back lifting me out of bed walk me around and burp me after
the small of
who
could
games and had about nine nineteen or twenty feet
my mom
to start
finally figured.
woman, she she
is is
is
tall,
beers. Ideally,
and although
I
I
into the air, or
watched would like a I've
all
someone the bowl
mom
about
considered for a while asking
working out with weights and drinking Nutrament,
Why put her through it? After all, she my best friend. have to take her as she
plenty good
I
enough
for
me.
is is,
not only
I
my
and the way
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A NOTE ON THE TYPE
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